Absolutely. I think the need for the program was very clear.
We already tried once in the 1990s without the Law Reform Commission, as I pointed out. There were the same kinds of concerns about value for money, and that the Department of Justice and the CBA could do it better than an independent agency that was off doing its own thing. That exercise was a flop. The Law Commission was reinstituted stronger than ever, with an even better framework. In its reincarnation, the Law Commission was incredibly skilled at establishing very effective consultation processes that we can all—the government and the CBA—learn from.
It really has done a fabulous job of engaging ordinary citizens in understanding the law better and in contributing to the way it's going in the future.