Mr. Rafiq, you told us not to repeat the same mistakes the U.K. had made.
Right now, Canada is facing a serious problem. All aspects of basic research have been cast aside, and that includes social sciences and humanities research. I have here a Globe and Mail article about a group in British Columbia that studies issues related to terrorism, security and society and does research on radicalization. According to the article, the group's federal funding has been cut. That's just one example among many.
Did you experience that problem in the U.K.? Did you fix it? How did the government fix that mistake? How was the government able to address that research gap?