I have two quick observations.
It would absolutely be possible to negotiate a trade agreement with real, enforceable labour rights and real sanctions. For example, the United States has been looking at negotiating trade agreements with actual human rights benchmarks incorporated into the text of the agreements. They have been negotiating trade agreements that have labour rights in the body of the agreement, not as a side agreement. They are looking at negotiating agreements that have real labour rights benchmarks with real penalties. That is the kind of approach, in our respectful submission, that Canada ought to be taking.
On the question of whether we should be moving ahead quickly with the trade agreement, my view is that we should wait to see exactly what takes place in the United States. It's not at all clear to me that the U.S. Congress is going to pass free trade with Colombia. The Democratic Party has historically been opposed to free trade with Colombia, so I do not see the rush for this government at present to move ahead as quickly as it seemingly wishes to do on free trade with Colombia.