Again, interoperability was mentioned previously. There are laws in many other jurisdictions in Europe and within Canada—there's British Columbia and now Quebec—that provide that privacy laws actually do apply to political parties. That is a recognition of the fact that information held by political parties is almost always sensitive information. It goes to the political views of political parties, and under privacy law, sensitive information is normally entitled to greater protection.
Right now we have no protection federally, except what political parties choose to put in their own privacy policies without any legal requirements, so I think it would be a very good thing for political parties to be subject to privacy laws.
For instance, with the CPPA, it could be possible to add a provision that would extend the CPPA to political parties, recognizing the sensitive nature of that information.