Good morning, Mr. Dade, and thank you very much for coming. I want to personally thank you for this great graph you sent us. As a science guy, I love graphs.
I'd like to drill down a bit on this graph. In light of the news this morning from Washington, if we roughly follow your timeline, what we're trying to do and what the United States is trying to do is all fine and good, but what we haven't talked about is the Mexican domestic situation.
If you look at the three main contenders for the Mexican presidency, the one who is emerging as a front-runner is Mr. Obrador, from the Morena party, who is anti-trade.
If you look at your timeline, and if we look at the fastest way we can get there, you have six months until negotiations end, on March 1, 2018. That will be within striking distance of the Mexican election. If the domestic election is anti-trade or if the public is anti-trade, then whether it's PRI or the Morena party or PRD, they are going to have to focus.
The best deal we could have gone with is with President Peña Nieto. Even with him, he's going to have to adjust his enthusiasm because he's going to have to pass power, probably to Secretary Videgaray, who is the emerging front-runner.
I don't understand. We're having this dialogue, which is great, but we're not focusing on the elephant in the room, which is the Mexican domestic situation. Could you highlight or provide some commentary on that?