There are a couple of things that I would reiterate.
The donation bought no influence. We never thought that a $200,000 donation would influence any government, as I said.
As for using the foundation to spread a pro-China message, that donation likely would have resulted in conferences that were not what the Chinese wanted to hear, as I already said. I think that's a key message. It goes to our motivation in terms of having thought this was not something we needed to be concerned about. We didn't see how this was actually going to influence us. Frankly, the idea that $200,000 is going to influence any government, I think is absurd, but other people have different views.
Second, in terms of whatever happened with the receipting, it is so much against the interest of the Trudeau Foundation to do anything that would jeopardize its charitable status. Either we did it right...and if we didn't do it right, then the CRA should tell us we didn't do it right. However, as far as we were concerned, this donation was made by a company and the receipt went to the company.
I've already talked about the discrepancy between the annual reports and the receipts.
Our motivation in this, in dealing with the folks we were dealing with, is that they were known quantities. They had donated to the University of Toronto. They had been dealing with the University of Montreal for a long time. It was the U of M that brought us into this, and we didn't think there was.... The Canadian ambassador in China was the one who introduced the University of Montreal to Mr. Zhang.
We thought, from a due diligence point of view, that we had done our due diligence. This was a donation that accorded with our priorities and allowed us and our scholars to learn about probably the biggest geopolitical issue over the past 30 years, which is the rise of China and its implications.