Thank you.
I just wanted to explore, Ms. Bloodworth, what you had stated about the distinction you were trying to make between the point Mr. Alghabra was making, which was....
You had said, in response to one of my questions, that the Prime Minister had to have either 100% support or no support, that there was no middle ground, and that although the Prime Minister had a middle ground, where he said what in my opinion he should have said all along, that we should wait and find out what the results are of the committee's questioning, because a lot of questions are being asked and we want to wait and find out what that process is and we reserve judgment...and he took that position. And you said yes, but he resigned 36 hours later, so it's no big deal.
So did the Prime Minister know, then? I mean, when he was saying that, the distinction you're making must be that the Prime Minister knew 36 hours in advance of him resigning. That's the only way I could understand the distinction you just made. Because as far as the Prime Minister knew...as he was saying, he had no intention for the commissioner to resign, so the distinction you make doesn't jibe. The fact that he was 36 hours...it could have been 10 years later as far as he knew when he made that statement.