I think there's a direct linkage.
I always make it very clear that I'm not representing Enbridge; I'm representing Sarnia and the workers here, and the people who benefit from Enbridge being here. They're big enough to take care of themselves.
But there's no question that gets thrown into the mix. I ask people to judge Line 5. I ask people to judge the half a billion dollars that's going to be spent on it. I ask them to judge the upgrades that have been made here when they didn't have to.... That's the way I'm trying to approach it.
However, I will say, the tactics have changed. In the beginning, my letters were going to Governor Whitmer...and I've had good relationships with other governors. Jim Blanchard, who was the former American ambassador to Canada, was great to deal with, and often came by the city and just said hello. We had a good relationship.
This is different, so that's why the tactics changed. Enbridge was part of that, and so were many other groups, like the agriculture groups and a number of the people that Ms. Gladu has been working with. We decided we needed to talk to Ottawa. We were not getting anywhere...any traction at all with the Governor of Michigan that appealed to friendship and trade.
By the way, in 2018, Ontario and Michigan signed an agreement to expand trade, to work closer together—all forgotten with the change in the government.
We turned to Ottawa, and I think Ottawa has been supportive, particularly in the last few weeks after the minister appeared at this committee. I think now we really are more depending on Ottawa to [Technical difficulty—Editor] in Lansing.