I think everybody wants to know where Congress stands on certain issues. It's not unified, as we all know. Even the Republican Party is not unified.
I think it's fair to say that there are many free traders. Historically the Republican Party has been the defender of free trade, and there are still those voices. We're hearing less about border adjustment taxes coming out of Congress, but I would say that this one is still not dead, and it would be enormously damaging. It's just another way of talking about tariffs.
In terms of stressing obviously mutual advantage and getting our numbers right in terms of who really benefits, particularly in those northern tier states, from an open trading relationship with Canada, I think we're doing a lot of that already. Both the cabinet and the premiers are. This really is Team Canada. It may not be Team Canada when it comes to the home game, but when it comes to the overseas or the cross-border game, it's Team Canada. I think that has to continue.
I think your meeting with your counterparts can be enormously beneficial, but that means going with a well-honed brief, clear message lines, and a recognition that, yes, we can make the status quo better: we don't have to go backward, we need to look forward.
I'd just like to add that one area in which we should be looking forward is the whole area of e-commerce. That is where, with regard to the growth of the middle class, to come back to your point about Mexico, huge opportunities will emerge in Mexico in the whole e-commerce field as Mexicans get credit cards and start shopping online.