Thank you, Mr. Chairman, and welcome to our witnesses.
Just on the comment about where we should be engaged, on how many fronts, and the free trade negotiations around the globe, I think we have to understand that we were in a serious free trade deficit compared to the rest of the industrialized world. We're still there. There's been a real re-engagement with the Americas under this government, and this Prime Minister in particular. There also is Canadian direct investment in the Americas of over $100 billion. That's significant, and it can't be ignored. Colombia is part of that. Peru was part of that, and it has now signed. There are free trade negotiations going on with the Central American four countries: Guatemala, Honduras, Nicaragua, and El Salvador. There are free trade negotiations going on with CARICOM, and there are free trade negotiations going on in Asia and in France. So I don't think it's quite as simple as saying that you can ignore what's going on on your doorstep, where there is significant Canadian investment and bilateral trade, and put all your eggs in the EU, when the EU is just in its infancy as far as negotiations go, because there were none.
Ms. Simons, I'd like you to expound on the whole idea of the labour and environment side agreements. I really have some difficulty following the logic that the glass is half full and that mankind is kind of born in sin and we'll never get out of that. That's an ideology that I've never really aspired to. But I think there are positives here, and there are real positives. It's not as simple as saying corporations are all evil and will never drag themselves out of the mire. I had the opportunity to visit with a number of corporations doing mining in Central America. They were doing great work.
So what do you do? Doing nothing is not an option. Allowing investment to just go rampant is not an option. Having regulated, governed, rules-based trade is an option, but I'm not hearing that from you.