You said something interesting, that your chapter, your representative in Washington, is working on U.S. stakeholders to apply pressure to U.S. legislators. A congressman running for office is looking for money one year and looking for votes the next year. If you're a Canadian legislator, you represent neither votes nor money, so it's a polite meeting but not particularly effective.
Are you suggesting that we get more mercenary in our approach in the U.S. and that we hire the kinds of lobbyists people hire to get things done in Washington, to build those stakeholders and, frankly, take a more practical approach? Do you think there's merit to our at least expanding on that? It's not like any other country in the world to do trade negotiations with. Should we have a different approach?