Thank you very much for appearing here today.
Ian, you mentioned an “uneven power struggle” nationally. I'd like to take this one step further and talk about that internationally.
Maybe, Ms. Keyowski, I'll start with you because you were talking about us negotiating and agreeing to things and coming back here and they don't seem to work. I posed a question to different people yesterday and today about supply management and how it fits into the whole framework of negotiations at the WTO, but when you were talking, I just thought of another thing. In our supply management sector we allow something like 5% of the poultry industry to come in, or 7.5% from NAFTA countries. But internationally, the European Union has a quota of 0.5% for pork, for example. So as an example, before we do anything, before we even think or talk about supply management—and our government has said it will guarantee supply management—should we not just be saying to these guys, look, we've got this 5% for poultry and it's a managed sector, so let's start here, Europe. Why don't you allow 5% of your pork production to come in as imports from outside Europe?
That's the first question I had. Maybe I'll get you to answer that.