Thank you for the question.
Our counterparts are the AFL-CIO, and we have a close relationship. Some of it is more formal, say, through the ITUC and through projects that we work on together, and some is informal and just through relationships.
Our goals are very similar in terms of raising the bar for workers when it comes to this type of work by ensuring that we have minimum standards, that we're respecting the rights of workers and that we're calling out forced labour and lower standards.
We also share affiliates. Some of our international unions that are affiliated with the CLC are also affiliated with the AFL-CIO.
For brevity, what I'll highlight in terms of where the differences are is that the U.S. government has a close relationship with the AFL-CIO, and they're working quite closely together on the approach to what this means in terms of CUSMA. One of our requests is that we have a better relationship so that we are at the table in a more formal way here in order to ensure that the discussion around workers' rights, what workers need and what's good for communities includes unions.