There's lots that needs to be done there, and I think all our organizations share that interest. The labour movement certainly is wrestling with this question of how we do it. It's a great question. It doesn't fit, necessarily, with a TPP deal that's written and rather set in stone. It is something we need to address and build some better partnerships for finding ways to work together to create employment opportunities for the Canadians we have here already.
I think the TPP puts some handcuffs on those opportunities, and that certainly limits it. This is one of the reasons we're here today. To say that this is a great conversation, and many of these questions are very good, but the question that's going to be before the government is whether the deal that's already set in stone is a yea or a nay. For all the reasons we're talking about, it needs to be a nay.