Human rights is a key element of our foreign policy and our trade policy. When it comes to our trade policy, one way we're doing that is, for example, to promote gender. Canada is the first G7 nation to have a gender chapter in one of its trade agreements. We were the second country in the world, the first G7, and this was in our trade agreement with Chile. In the CPTPP, we have an enforceable labour chapter and an enforceable environment chapter. As I said, I think Canadians, those who are watching us, want us to have a broad-based trade agenda, but not at the expense of the environment, of labour rights.
In many places around the world where I have been, I say trade is a march to the top, not a race to the bottom. Every time Canada is at the table, we're trying to raise standards. You cannot do trade the way we used to do it. Trade needs to benefit everyone, and we need to look at win-win situations. Just as we're doing in NAFTA, we're trying to do that in all our trade agreements.