Yes. I should say, though, that safeguards are a WTO-sanctioned part of the China accession policy. It's hard to even really think of something sort of protectionist, which is often seen as a leftist ideology, to be something that George Bush's government negotiated, but they did.
But on your issue of government procurement in particular, which we have taken a new and active interest in, I think you're completely right. The policy does need to be comprehensive. It needs to do things like encourage niche markets. It needs to do things like safeguards, which will give us some of that breathing space. But also, the Canadian government and in fact all levels of government need to consider that we might be sending somebody across the world to stand up for the interests of Canada in the Canadian army, yet they might be wearing goods made in China.
The Toronto Transit Commission actually has a very interesting procurement policy—some folks might have heard of it. It has a policy, negotiated by the transit workers' union, at least in terms of garments, that their uniforms are made in Canada, because that is a priority. They say, we are government-funded and we should therefore be also supporting the taxpayers who pay into that government funding, and we can do that by buying Canadian-made products.
So that has been a priority for some governments, and I understand Manitoba just instituted a fair trade procurement policy as well. So yes, we absolutely should do that.