Sure, Mr. Housefather. Thank you very much for the question.
It's fair to say that our offices in the U.S. have the ear of some influential members of Congress and influential members of the Senate. I think the dynamic here, not to oversimplify it, is that sometimes good politics doesn't make good public policy. You're all politicians. You get how that works. Unfortunately, that's the nature of the beast. We're dealing with a dynamic where much of the American public believes that buy America is a good economic policy, and that's going to help get members re-elected in the mid-terms and so on.
We can have these conversations, and we can have reasonable conversations with elected officials on both sides of the border, but sometimes that's tempered by politics. That's the reality of what we have to try to cut through. I've given you numerous examples of how buy America and buy American policies are not good for construction—and we've shared this with our counterparts in the U.S. for construction—but sometimes that gets trumped by politics.