Thank you, Mr. Chair.
I may not take all the time, but I do want to return to my comments of a little earlier about the process. There were 14 different agencies. There was $1.1 billion that actually ended up to be $664 million, so 61% of the amount that was approved was actually spent.
My comment, though, is that you talk about the complexities of it—and don't ever take away from that, because it's a bit like the whole economic action plan, rolling out that much money so quickly that we wanted to make sure mistakes were not made. We now have an internal audit that talks about a financial management internal audit that helps bring about, I think in your words, accountability and transparency. So that is good.
But during this time, when it was actually approved by Parliament, all of us stood up to pass this—well, enough stood up, because we were in a minority government. Since then, if there was this big a concern, which has been going on now for weeks, was there communication at any time from the opposition to the Auditor General saying it didn't know the complexities, didn't understand them, and asking how it came about this way or if there was a procedural...? Did any of that ever come to you, to the Auditor General, raising those concerns, which have been on the table now every day since Parliament has resumed?