I think it's important to note and understand, based on Canadian intelligence's own observations, that India's foreign interference is pervasive at all levels of government and in all parties.
Just finishing off that last point, in that 2019 annual report where you're talking about electoral interference, the reporting is that when CSIS wanted to dismantle that intelligence network, the Government of Canada actually told CSIS to stand down and not take the action that it wanted to take to dismantle the intelligence network, because it was going to disrupt Canada's intention to export pulses. Also, it would have created complications and potentially kiboshed the Prime Minister's trip to India. That was a conscious decision that was taken at that time.
With regard to foreign interference in the Conservative leadership race, we saw that the NSICOP report in June of this year talks—I believe it's in paragraph 73—about intelligence reporting interference in the Conservative Party's leadership race.
If you go into the exhibits of the foreign interference commission, there is an intelligence assessment by CSIS—I believe it was in October 2022—that's heavily redacted. It talks about foreign interference by India in the leadership of a political party, which coincides with the Conservative Party's leadership race at that time.
Sam Cooper, who engaged in media reporting around this time, talks about getting exclusive access to an unredacted copy that goes into detail that India targeted the leadership race of the Conservative Party at that time, particularly by excluding a leadership candidate from the Conservative Party from attending any events that were being held by the Indian diaspora community, and the consulate in particular, because that individual had taken policy positions that were contrary to India's interests.