First is the overall importance of the relationship and being able to communicate that to metropolitan areas and districts in the U.S. We are working together, so our consul general in Dallas, for example—and Colin may be able to speak to this as well—is working with the consulate generals of Mexico. Mexico has three consulate generals in Texas. We have one that has to cover Texas, New Mexico, Oklahoma, Arkansas, and Louisiana, but it's idiosyncratic with the Mexicans. Some Mexican consulate generals are very strong in the diplomatic presence; others are incredibly weak, because they're focused only on consular activities. So where there is that, we are working together.
In terms of the trade agreement, agriculture, the rules of origin within North America, is the second area. Regarding dairy, the primary concern of the Americans is not supply management. This is Martha Hall Findlay's latest paper on supply management. It will be out in a week, and I'm told to shill it for her. It's actually a damn good piece of work. The Americans' concern is with access to the Mexican dairy market. That's their number one priority. If we're worried about dairy, and the Americans are worried about continued access to Mexico, shouldn't we be talking to the Mexicans?
That's just one example.