Thank you very much, Madam Chair.
As this is our first committee meeting, I just want to say that it's an honour having you before us at our first committee meeting of this 43rd session. You have presented before at the former trade committee meetings and some of us who were part of the past trade committee have heard about your great work, and some new folks are just hearing of it. I'm sure they are aware of your great work as well.
I'm from Sault Ste. Marie, a steel town, and 60% of Algoma steel is exported to the United States. When Donald Trump put the section 232 tariffs on steel and aluminum—well, 25% on steel and 10% on aluminum—there was great concern in my community and across this country. A lot of people didn't think he was going to do it, but he did it and he used it on the grounds of national security.
I have always said that from my window there, I literally look across at the United States and I don't see any gunboats in the St. Marys River or any turrets. We have the longest undefended border. We have NORAD in North Bay, a shared defence.
It was insulting for Canadians, I think, for them to use that tool at that time. It was not only insulting, but also of great concern to people in Sault Ste. Marie. I'd walk into a Tim Hortons for donuts and the nervousness, not just on the faces of the steelworkers, but their spouses, their children, their parents was of really deep concern and it hurt badly.
I was proud of this Parliament's coming together, and of this trade committee that went down to Washington—united, all parties—and looked square in the face of the American legislators and said that we would not pass this until they lifted those section 232 tariffs on steel and aluminum.
I know there were many other committees that went down. I went down with the industry committee. I co-chair the all-party steel committee, and we did the same thing. That, I think, coupled with the dollar-for-dollar counterpunching we did above our weight, not only on steel and aluminum, but also on gherkins and sleeping bags and Jack Daniel's, I think, caught their attention and hurt them back a bit.
As well, we made a lot of changes to strengthen our steel remedy system: anti-circumvention, scoping, and hired 40 new Canada Border Service Agency workers specialized in forensics to do that.
In your opinion, Steve, could you please explain to us how important it was and how maybe other areas of this great country came together to work against those section 232 tariffs that were really hurting the steel and aluminum industry?