Thank you for that question.
Certainly I think the most important thing about the Office of the Auditor General is the institution of the office. It is critical that we provide information parliamentarians and this committee can rely on, and that they know we have done the work that needs to be done to make sure that when we bring something forward it is very much evidence-based.
In the office we have a very rigorous process that helps us identify which audits to do and ensures that we do them in a rigorous manner. So fundamentally for me the most important thing is to continue to do the things the office is known for: provide information to Parliament that Parliament can use to hold government accountable, and make sure that services are being well provided to the citizens. There's a whole mechanism and machinery in the office that is geared toward making sure that happens. Part of my role is to let that do its work and not get in its way.