There are 338 of you, and there is also the Senate, so there would be decisions about how wide that would need to be and at what level. It is a question of design on which you can come to some agreement among the parties as to how far to go.
Of course, there would have to be training. With the accountability comes a possibility of sanctions. I don't have those clearances anymore, but they came with an accountability in that, if I divulged secrets that I had read or seen, I could have gone to jail. I could have been fined. I could have lost my job. I could have lost my security clearance.
In the public service, if you lose your security clearance, it's tantamount to being fired, because you can't do the work anymore. That's a tricky area. What would be the sanctions on a rogue parliamentarian who decided to leak? That happens in the States and that happens in the U.K., so there is a lot to work through there, but limiting it as narrowly as we're doing now isn't working for us anymore.