Thank you, Mr. Chair.
It's normal and is part of our democracy to have the Minister of Innovation intervene not only in this situation but also in general. We've seen the Investment Canada Act, and we'll have more legislation on that coming up.
I look back at the competitive issues. Zellers being taken over by Target didn't help competition. Future Shop being taken over by Best Buy didn't help competition. Rona was taken over by Lowe's, and that didn't increase competition. In fact, the undertakings there were very modest. Also, U.S. Steel is gone.
There have been rejections, and good examples are—thank goodness—potash and MDA regarding satellites. Those have been strong things. We also have the minister, who directs the CRTC to some degree by having a mandate letter, which comes from the Prime Minister. In mere fact, we're dealing with a public asset here. It's the spectrum that we push out in the system.
My first question is for Mr. Bester, and it's with regard to where we are now in our policies. I'm curious about that. Is there any other comparative out there in the United States, Australia or other places? I know the U.S. has antitrust legislation that is different from ours, but what else can we look at to fall back on? Do we need to modernize some of our approaches here?
The U.S. is actually looking at some of the antitrust stuff going on now with Google. Historically, this comes as part of their culture, and we can look at one of the first cases, the one with Standard Oil. It's part of their actual functioning market economy to have this type of protection for consumers. Could you comment, please?