Okay, that's a good question.
I do want to point out that some of the improvements that we saw in Canadians' outlook on the U.S.-Canada relationship predate President Bush. There had been a warming. I think solutions on softwood lumber and a few other things had a positive impact.
But to your point, I think the key driver of low regard for the administration of the United States and President Bush was a belief that the foreign policy was fundamentally wrong-headed. There were other factors as well, but this was probably at the top of the list.
And this was not unique to Canada; this was something that went on in most western countries. There was a belief that the pursuit of so-called viral democracy, going over and fusing capital markets with democracy in Iraq and other places, was going to inoculate us against terrorism. There was a sense--and this also emanated from American society--that was possibly theoretically true, but in reality it seemed it made things worse.
So I think a lot of the very low regard that Canadians had for the administration was focused on the fact that they believed the foreign policy was fundamentally wrong-headed and perhaps destructive.