So you can't say that, as I asked?
What are the mitigating measures? You can't have it both ways. As I said, Parliament needs time to go through this legislation and vet it. It probably needs more time than normal because you haven't done consultations, you haven't had ministerial meetings with stakeholders and you don't know what the stakeholders require. In fact, if you talk to stakeholders right now, for example, in the agricultural sector, they're not happy with CETA. They have some disappointments with it and they don't want to see that cut and pasted into the U.K. agreement.
They have all sorts of concerns and if that's exactly what you've done, then they're going to look at it and ask, “What have we dealt with here, what have we got?”
We need, again, to know for sure that you've got a plan in place with the U.K., drawn up so that on January 1, we understand that there's no cause to be concerned, that we can actually see business continuing as you're promising.