I think that could be one effect. It's really, in my view, unconscionable that another government could be threatening a member of Parliament and his family. That this has happened is a huge surprise to most of us. Without much broader action on China's general interference in our society, we can find more things like this happening again. They may stop that particular case, but there will be other things they do. For example, WeChat, as Mr. Johnston points out, is controlled in the PRC, so really there's nothing we can do about it.
Many other countries are watching what we do in this committee and the Johnston hearings and what Canada does about this very serious foreign interference. One thing we may want to do is look at WeChat and suggest that, working together, we could each, in our own country...have Canadian data kept on Canadian servers of WeChat rather than have Canadian data kept in the PRC. That's something that's tangible. It's something that a public inquiry could look into, and it could discuss with legislators the ways in which this would be done and how it would be drafted. I don't think high-level public hearings are going to get at opportunities like that.