I agree with that completely. That was exactly what I was thinking: that it's one thing to say we're accountable to the electorate at the ballot box come election day, but it's another thing to be directly accountable to the women who are most directly affected by what it is you're doing. You've heard from many of them, and there are many more who are experts, the front-line organizations who work on behalf of aboriginal women and on behalf of the women's anti-violence movement generally. I think it would be great to see some accountability to them. They have so much expertise and they do so much with so little. I think that would be really important.
Part of it is not just simply recommendations that can be ignored, but an actual requirement to report on what's been done--