Thank you, Mr. Chair.
Thank you, premiers, for being here. It's a privilege for us to have you here.
I'm not going to get too much into roads. I've driven on most of them. Give me a good gravel road over a bad paved road any day, like the shale on the Dempster Highway. If you want to drive with me sometime, anyone is welcome, but there's only room for one passenger because the back seat is full of spare tires. That's what you do, and you just assume your windshield will never be the same.
When most Canadians look at a map of Canada, they look at the demographic centres and the population along the southern border, and our minds go there. When I look at the map of Canada, Arviat is in the centre. If you go from Pond Inlet at the top to Point Pelee in southern Ontario, and from St. John's, Newfoundland to Victoria, or Whitehorse, which is west of Victoria, you're in the centre of Canada, and it really is something we have to get into our southern Canadian minds.
I think right now with what is happening with the geopolitical world we're in and the threats to our sovereignty, which we are hearing daily, I would have worries on both sides and in the middle. Those are the threats with respect to Greenland's sovereignty, which then remind us of the vulnerability in Nunavut, but also critical minerals. We don't have the Premier of Yukon here, but we have challenges from Alaska into Yukon, and we have Chinese challenges in the middle with critical minerals and mining. Right now, the north is on Canadians' minds, so we're looking for more input on our foreign policy and how Canada engages in the world with your input.
With respect to that, part of our Arctic foreign policy, which came out of the strategic document from 2019, is to have a better relationship with both the territorial governments and the indigenous governments.
Are we doing better at engaging you on issues that matter to all of Canada, or can we do better? If so, how could we do better to get your full participation? We've had indigenous leaders here from the north as well, but now we have the territorial governments, so particularly, how can we structurally engage your governments in thoughtful discourse on the world stage?
