I want to thank the manufacturers and the associations that support the manufacturers for all the jobs you have created, the risks you have taken. I feel it has been a partnership not only in terms of business but also with the government. We were there with the bailout when you needed the investment, and we came out more fruitfully on the other side so that has been very important.
Canadians have seen that and have understood the partnership and the friendship we have in people to people. We have families, tourism, etc. But the public opinion polls have looked at sentiments of how Canadians perceive the United States, and they are at their lowest levels to date, and these have been tracked since 1982.
They were saying it's partly because of all the negativity and everything we're hearing around trade and isolationism, etc., and looking again to open back up.
We've just signed and passed through Parliament what we feel is the most progressive trade agreement in Canada's history, and that is CETA, which we've done with the European Union.
I don't know how immersed you are in that agreement, but as we look to this tweaking or modernization or whatever with NAFTA, have you seen aspects of CETA that you would like to see in any kind of changes to NAFTA? I'll open that up to Mr. Sinclair.