My suggestion, to be clear, is that it fund those cases that have national implications.
I can give you an example of one that was not funded but which I was involved in, the M. v. H. case, which was argued all the way to the Supreme Court of Canada. It was an Ontario case challenging provisions in family law legislation in Ontario that discriminated against same-sex couples and that denied same-sex couples access to spousal support upon a breakdown of their relationship. Once that case was decided by the Supreme Court of Canada, laws in every province and territory were changed across the country. There was omnibus legislation in most jurisdictions to radically transform laws. It was a case that unquestionably had national implications.
When it started, the court challenges program was still in existence, but nobody made an application, to my knowledge, and would not have received funding, I presume, because the funding wasn't there.