Good morning. Thank you very much for being here this morning.
My first question is regarding the trilateral summit that you mentioned, Mr. Morrison. As we know, in July 2018 there will be a Mexican election. We know that President Pena will not be eligible to run. From some of the reading I've done and what I've heard on the ground, the next election in Mexico will be fought on some sense of economic nationalism.
If you look at what's happening right now with NAFTA—and you were quite clear that this would have to be a trilateral arrangement—my fear is that if that election is fought on economic nationalism, when the new Mexican president assumes office, part of his platform will have to cater to domestic considerations. You're going to have a natural tension point between the United States and Mexico. Where does Canada fit in? Eventually, whatever the negotiations lead to, either they will lead to a trilateral agreement within NAFTA, or there will have to be a bilateral agreement with the United States with Mexico out.
Is there a contingency plan for both scenarios? Obviously, the easier one would be to have all three at the negotiating table. On the other hand, if the Mexican election in 2018 proves to be fought on economic nationalism, and they recede or recuse themselves from NAFTA, then, because of the supply chain integration, I wonder how we are going to manage that file. Are we going to have to have two agreements? What are your comments on that, or do you have any sort of fallback plan or backup plan in that scenario?