Above all else, before it was NAFTA, it was the Canada-U.S Free Trade Agreement. That was really the political dialogue that happened. If you recall, NAFTA slid in without a lot of controversy, whereas the Canada-U.S. Free Trade Agreement, and the election around that, nearly killed me. It was an extremely intense election campaign.
What the countries declared with that agreement was that we have a special relationship; we have the best relationship. No other two countries trade like this, trading as amicably as we do and have such a complete and respectful relationship in education and sports, the faith community, the defence relationship, and all manner of things. That's why I said that Chapter 19—the decision to create a body to take us out of the courts when we have trade disputes—was such an important central gesture, because it said that these two partners ought not to be stuck in the 6th District Court of Appeal, for example, for 11 years on some dispute. We're special partners, so we should have a facilitated system. That's why I think it's so important that we maintain that.
As the economy has evolved, the United States and Canada are jointly a kind of fortress North America—although we don't perhaps see it quite like that. We are jointly making products. In Canada, about 73% of our exports go to the United States, but about 20% of those are onward bound. In other words, we're just feeding into an American supply chain, which is then exporting. Our products are actually ending up in the rest of the world, but they're doing so via the partnership. As Mr. McKay said, there are some cases where Americans are sending their product through for assembly in Canada, to be shipped onward. We are quite significant partners with each other.
I'm not sure the auto sector is my favourite example, but it gets cited a lot because it's so enormous. The biggest manufacturing sector in Canada is not autos; it's actually food. That's where a tremendous amount of our semi-finished product is shipped onward, once it's been married up in the United States. We're actually partners in commerce. We just need to remind them of that.