One of the things I find curious about this exchange is, if I were to ask: Does the government believe in low- or non-tariff trade? I suspect you would say yes, that it is the point of these agreements, which is to reduce tariffs going into other markets. That would be a principle that the government seeks to manifest in its trade agreements.
When I ask if you have a principled objection to investor-state dispute settlement mechanisms, I can't get a similarly straight answer.
Why this is important to me is that I do have a principled objection to investor-state dispute settlement clauses. I agree, not just with the statements of Minister Freeland, but many others who have noticed that these kinds of clauses, whether in NAFTA or other agreements, have cost Canada a lot of money and tend to interfere with good public interest regulation.
I don't have a problem saying that. That's something I don't want to see.
I've heard that the government in the United Kingdom is not asking for investor-state dispute settlement mechanisms. I notice that fully 20% of the work of this agreement has gone into keeping ISDS provisions possible, and I am wondering who is driving that train.
Will Canada be proposing an ISDS mechanism in the subsequent round of negotiations, or will it make a point of fighting against having those kinds of clauses in the agreement?