We don't have a coherent industrial plan. Really, what our industrial policy in this country has been is actually the summation of a patchwork of policies at the federal, provincial and municipal level.
Ultimately, what you do in an FTA reflects your domestic industrial policy. People like to talk a lot about CETA's intellectual property provisions on pharmaceuticals. Yes, there were some changes made around patent term restoration, but at the end of the day, fairly marginal in the grand scheme of things, and that reflected our own domestic IP policy.
To respond to the point about democracy and taking away the rights of governments, at the end of the day, sovereign governments remain sovereign to withdraw from these agreements. If governments and their citizens are not happy with them, invoke the withdrawal clause, and that is the way to get out. These agreements are not permanently binding on governments in perpetuity once you sign on the dotted line.