Indeed, Mexico is an essential partner in the North American context. NAFTA has been around for a number of years. The Canadian Council of Chief Executives operates like a secretariat for the North American Competitiveness Council. These are business people from the three countries who have given various opinions to the leaders of the three countries in the trilateral context of the Security and Prosperity Partnership of North America. We talk and work a lot with our counterparts and we've discussed matters with the three governments in an attempt to find trilateral solutions. Borders are still one of the central issues in those discussions. We currently don't know what the future holds for the trilateral process, but we hope it will continue in one form or another. We'll see what happens.
For the moment, Canada must hold bilateral discussions with the United States because the problems at the Canada-U.S. border are different, in a number of respects, from those at the U.S.-Mexican border. So we have to try to find solutions in Canada to solve our problems at the border. We can also have trilateral discussions, but first we have to focus a little more on bilateral discussions. That will produce results more quickly.