I'll actually continue my colleague's thought and say that this is something we have to mend. Working people are the reason we're facing this right now, because they felt left out. We have to talk about fairness in trade. We have to talk about the way that it impacts workers and communities. If that means a transition into other types of jobs, if that means letting them know how closely tied their jobs are to NAFTA....
I drive an F-150. I built F-150 engines in Windsor, Ontario. I love the bumper sticker; I think it's important. We have to tell the story of trade in a positive way, and the way that we do that in this renegotiation is that we address the inequalities. We go head-on to the inequalities that people have responded to, and we fix them. It's the best way forward for us because we're a trading nation. It's incredibly important, and we have to have trade with other countries.
My question really goes around the labour chapter and how we can include workers' rights to organize and bargain collectively for those better wages and working conditions that will level the playing field across our countries. To what extent are workers in Mexico able to organize and bargain collectively for better wages and working conditions?