Well, I don't agree with Mr. Warner.
A key consideration for Canada as well as the United States is the relationship with indigenous communities, the indigenous population in Canada, and there's been a tremendous amount of action taken over the decades towards reconciliation. This Liberal government has made it very clear that there's no more important relationship than the relationship of Canada with indigenous peoples. Whether that means that this falls within the purview of international trade, or whether it's domestic affairs, all these things are part and parcel of what makes us a community and a people, and what makes us Canadian.
I will point out to Mr. Warner, and anybody else who's interested, the extensive trade networks that used to exist in times gone by throughout North America, from the eastern seaboard well into the Northwest Territories—massive trade routes—so free trade has been a thing in North America, practised by indigenous peoples, for millennia. This artificial boundary that's been imposed certainly gets in the way of that and of facilitating the engagement of indigenous economies in international trade.