Thank you so much, Mr. Niquidet.
That's probably the most important piece to me in this. It's making sure that Canadian jobs are protected and Canadian families get what they need, so they can put food on the table and continue to do the hard work of building up our economy.
My concerns, of course, come from the very unique perspective or frame that if we're going to organize our economy, like Mr. Laplante suggests, which I agree with, we do need an industrial policy that looks at our inputs and our outputs, particularly the outputs that help the public good.
As policy-makers and people who sit in the House of Commons, our job isn't necessarily to make the bottom line higher for Canada's corporations, or in some cases the multinational corporations. Our job is to make sure our economy is working for Canadians and for everyday people.
That's why I asked that question, and that is why I ask the next question.
How many of the workers that are present in B.C. or in the membership of the mills that you represent are unionized?