Thank you, Madam Chair.
I just want to follow up on Mr. Champoux's questions.
You certainly aren't slow. If you are, I'm much slower than you are. I really do appreciate those questions.
I just wanted to dig into the fact of litigation privilege. I think there's some value in this. I'm not trying to undermine that term in total, but I do want to unpack it a bit.
I guess I could imagine a situation in which you had an individual who was a sexual assault victim and they wanted to change the legislation. We wouldn't want to discourage those folks by publicizing their name or otherwise. I get that 110% , but I would think that in most cases we would want published, any time the taxpayers are funding litigation, what they are paying for—the performance they are getting for those dollars, just like any other program, and the result of those programs.
Forgive me for this little bit of ignorance, but as of today, before this bill, do taxpayers get to know where their dollars are going with respect to any of the cases right now, or no?