Many thanks.
Before crafting the open letter that we sent to President Peña Nieto on January 17 of this year, we had internal consultations with our members. I would not say they were with all 300 members, but I would say they were with representatives of all the sectors that are part of the chamber. We have manufacturing, mining, pharmaceutical services, etc.
The position is that this is a very valuable asset. Once you have a free trade agreement, you have not only access but certainty in the access. We heard months ago, or even weeks ago, from other members of the U.S. government that their concern would be to dismantle the dispute settlement system of NAFTA, which as you know comprises chapter 11 on the investment side, chapter 19, which is dumping and countervailing, and chapter 20, which is a general one. There is a concern among some of the members, particularly the Canadians who are investing in Mexico, that this could be eroded in any manner. Certainly any impact related to NAFTA would translate, as you rightly put it, into job losses and an environment that is uncertain.
The other position is that if you go to NAFTA article 2205, you have a hypothetical case in which one of the members—in this case, the U.S.—would be leaving NAFTA. It is spelled out clearly there that Canada and Mexico would continue to be there. The bottom line is to keep NAFTA going on if we reach that scenario, which I would say is improbable.
The other position of the main members of the chamber is that with or without NAFTA, two things should be done. We should exploit, on a bilateral basis, all the potential of our relationship. For example, in terms of connectivity—