The next step.... Of course, we have won all three challenges at the WTO and the appeals that the Americans have brought forward. My gut feeling is that they will appeal again, simply because they'll ride this to the bottom. They'll go as far as they can with it. That would be unfortunate, because it just delays the inevitable at the end of the day.
The WTO is meeting again on November 28, and I understand this will be an agenda item. The Americans wanted it pushed off until January or February; we've held it to this meeting. They may ask for a week or 10 days to get their papers in order. I'm hopeful that we can keep the pressure on them.
Everybody recognizes now that this is a political fix to a problem that really doesn't exist. American consumers have the ability now to know where their product is coming from. If somebody wants to address it and say “Product of the U.S.”, they can. It doesn't have to have a full passport attached to it that shows it was raised here, born there, moved there, and all that, because of the integration of the North American market.
The harm we have seen on the Canadian side is mirrored on the American side as well, and the American administration tends to look the other way and try not to see what's happening. But three major plants have closed and three more are on life support, simply because they do not have the capacity, without the economies of scale of Canadian and Mexican product moving down there.
When you talk to guys like Roger Johnson, who was the head of the NFU down there and is now an adviser to Tom Vilsack, it appears that the whole purpose of this was to save the small farm. Well, it hasn't, not at all. It is ridiculous policy, very bad policy.
There's a growing agreement that they have to do something about this. Secretary Vilsack is now saying he's working within the letter of the law. Well, you're the administration; change the damn law. He's asking for time to negotiate. There's no negotiation. All I want to talk about is how soon they're going to fix this, because we're not going to see this hurt continue.
We still rely on the Americans for some 70% of our processing capacity. It's very valuable to us, and the processing sector down there needs it. We've seen Tyson stop buying Canadian cattle simply because of the way they have to be segregated and discriminated against, and that's the very argument we keep winning at the WTO.
We'll keep the pressure on. We have a very vibrant list of retaliatory measures. We hate to do it, but I'll tell you, at the end of the day we're not polite Canadians; we are proud Canadians who want to see this fixed. We'll continue to underscore how this is harmful on both sides of the border and does not serve anyone at any time.
The retail councils, the wholesalers, the processors, the ranchers, and the vast majority, for the most part, in the U.S. are with us on this. They've taken their own government to court, working with our industry in that regard. They lost the initial suit and they're going back with an appeal. This time around they have more than 100 congressmen and senators signing on to that appeal, asking the administration to fix it. It can't be ignored much longer.