My sense is that their own preference is a bilateral with Canada. It's not as important a relationship for them as it is for us. I think we have more than a two to one advantage in our trade balance with Britain, but as I said earlier, I think it's very difficult for anybody to be negotiating with Britain right now because they're totally preoccupied with getting out of the European Union. Keep in mind, they don't have a deep roster of trade negotiators, because all the British negotiators were part of the EU. They're starting from the ground up, trying to train a whole new team of trade negotiators, and I think they're focused right now on the EU.
The Americans are number one for them, but nothing is going to happen in the United States on a trade agreement with Britain or anybody else for the rest of this year, because we're into the silly season, as they call it, of their election, and Washington has been pretty silly for three years now.
The first thing that has to happen is that Britain has got to settle its hash with the European Union. Only then can countries like Canada, Australia and the United States decide which way we want to go. Is it to roll over CETA into a bilateral or strike a whole new bilateral? That's a decision we'll have to make once we know better what Britain's situation is coming out of the EU.