Of course we're at an early stage, in that there is not a complete negotiation yet. The negotiations are in progress and the agreement is not yet in front of us. But we have made it clear throughout that we wish to obtain protection for our culture and our cultural industries in the same fashion as has been the case in previous free trade agreements, from the time of the Canada-U.S. Free Trade Agreement.
It is not a significant challenge. I know that some who are concerned about the free trade agreement, who generally oppose all free trade agreements, wish to elevate it to that, but the reality is that we have, across the table, a negotiating partner that is perhaps the one negotiating partner in the world with a greater sensitivity to cultural protection than Canada, with a greater interest--as I said, 27 member countries, with 23 languages, all of whom have a very strong interest, notwithstanding their creation of an economic union, to protect and preserve their culture.