On the first timeline, Monday morning we will sit down in our offices, once we're over our jet lag, and start writing this report. This report will be issued in the first couple of weeks of July. It will go through, country by country, where we do not have full reciprocity. So it will say: we had a problem with Brazil and it is being sorted out in the following way; we had a problem with Australia and it is being sorted out; we had a problem with Brunei--believe it or not--and it is being sorted out in a certain way; we have a problem with the United States and it is or is not being sorted out in a certain way; we have a problem with Canada and it is or is not being sorted out in a certain way.
That report will, if it remains necessary, be accompanied by either the announcement of or perhaps even a legislative proposal already providing for measures to be taken against the countries that have not shown us progress toward reciprocity.
The European Commission doesn't legislate; it proposes legislation. The legislation will ultimately be adopted by the council of ministers representing the ministers of our member states, and it will be adopted on a qualified majority vote by those ministers.