Thank you for those insights.
We've known for a decade that the Harper Conservatives took a binary approach to trade agreements, where labour rights were always sacrificed. I don't believe labour unions are anti-trade, but of course they want comprehensive and progressive trade deals that work for workers. Can you expand on how labour's view of trade deals has evolved over the course of many years, and why including labour rights in trade agreements isn't as woke as the opposition claims, but is a common-sense approach to encouraging trade in the 21st century?