Mr. McPhail, I'm going to go back to some of the questions Mr. Oliphant was asking with respect to your mandate, because I think they're fairly germane. They're central to the discussion we need to have here today.
In your response to one of the questions Mr. Oliphant posed, you said that it's up to Parliament to make those decisions. I'm wondering whether you see it as your role to be an advocate. In other words, where you see problems, where you see things that are not working correctly, do you see it as your job to be a spokesperson on those issues and to advocate for change? If so, why would you make the comment that it's up to Parliament? Of course, obviously, it's up to Parliament to implement. But is it not up to you and your office, as was done by Mr. Kennedy, to expose areas of weakness, to criticize them, and to advocate for change?