Thank you.
I'm going to turn to Mr. Kennedy, first.
You counselled us, I think, to not go after the buy America plan head-on, but when dealing with the United States, to talk about the integrated nature of our trade and how closely tied all those supply chains and value chains are.
Again, I'm from British Columbia and one of the big issues here is that softwood lumber disagreement. Here we have a situation where the United States clearly needs our lumber, but we have a very vocal and very powerful set of businesses in the United States producing lumber that seem to have had the ear of every government in the United States over the past 30 years.
Why, then, hasn't this argument worked with them? Here we have a case where we're paying illegal tariffs and lumber prices are going through the roof because demand is so high. Why hasn't that argument worked, and how can we perhaps reshape it when we're talking about buy America or a new softwood lumber agreement?