I can't think of a better example. The IILA legislation was created, as I said, 80 years ago, during the Prohibition era. In all that time, it has never been enforced, not even once in eight decades. In fact, there's a legitimate question as to how the federal government could enforce this law.
However, the majority of Canadians are law-abiding people. Certainly the major shipping companies comply with this legislation, as do the vast majority of wine owners. On the one hand you have a Prohibition-era law that's over 80 years old and has never once been enforced, yet on the other hand you have economic activity being blocked because this law is a trade barrier more than anything else.
Imagine being in a business, and because a customer lives in the province next door, you're forced to refuse that sale. Canadians have collectively proven to be a very trade-savvy nation, yet when it comes to the wine industry, we do not currently allow free trade within our own country. It's almost unthinkable, were it not true.
I'm very pleased to have all parties' support on this, as this trade barrier does need to come to an end.