Thank you, Mr. Chair.
That's a good question.
If you can, imagine if every country legislates protection for anything. As Canada, we tend to try to sign comprehensive trade deals. Countries could decide that they would like to not sign the chapter on labour, say, or on the environment, or on anything else that we would like to see in that deal. It could be on the agriculture sector. It could be on anything. They will follow Canada's example. Because we are so dependent on trade, Canada tends to set examples for the world.
We're productive at WTO and productive all over the place in terms of trying to develop quality trade deals. If any country that we go into a bilateral or multilateral with sees how Canada is going to legislate protection for any sector—supply management is sort of secondary in this case—you can imagine that we would never get to commercially functional deals.