Let me start with your contention that we took any deal. To the contrary, we wanted a good deal and only a good deal for Canada. You might remember that you and your colleagues suggested that we just take any deal. We didn't do that. We protected dispute settlement. We protected the cultural industries, and we protected IP. That's what we did in renegotiating CUSMA.
Today, it is and continues to be a hallmark agreement to create competitiveness for our workers and for our people, while fighting climate change and transitioning our economy so that they can be strong in creating jobs.
The various issues that you raised are, of course, important ones. In a trade relationship that's nearly $2 trillion, you would expect that there are issues, and those issues are being dealt with. I'm happy to answer each of them individually, but suffice it to say that in this review, the work that we need to do...in all of my conversations with American businesses, with American labour workers, with Canadians, providing stability and certainty is what we must do, because our competition is not in North America. It's what we need to strengthen in our competitiveness.