I can assure you it won't have an impact on that. That will be a decision for the Government of Canada to take.
With respect to the general point you're raising, I guess it's one that was of fundamental concern to all of us as officials as the global compact on migration was being negotiated. We were particularly concerned when the United States withdrew and, as part of their withdrawal, they said they were concerned about the impacts on their sovereignty.
It's for that reason that we were so careful in paragraph 15 of the compact to put in there that this is a question that “reaffirms the sovereign right of States”. It's the reason that we put in there, in paragraph 7, that it's non-legally binding. Can countries—or the United Nations, or civil society or anyone else—campaign with Canada to pressure us to do x or y or z? Yes, they can, but ultimately it's a decision for Canada as a sovereign state and for the government of the day to decide whether they want to yield to that pressure.