We've been talking about what Wilbur Ross has said. He has said a lot of things that I disagree with. Canada has one of the strongest trade systems in place right now. We have well over 70 measures in place against steel dumping. In 2015, just a few months after we were elected, the steel industry, the unions, were in my office saying that there had been virtually no protection against dumped steel and that we needed changes. After a few months we put in place, in the first budget, measures that created a longer term in which these tariffs applied. We went and consulted and we heard. In 2016 we put in “particular market situation”, anti-circumventing, scope-ruling, and union participation. Then when the Prime Minister visited the Soo and many other places and talked with the United Steelworkers, the steel producer Algoma, the mayor, and all the stakeholders, he enacted more money for more guards with the CBSA and put in a lot more money and a whole bunch of other things.
My question is quite clear: without those in place, is there a steel and an aluminum industry under the current situation?