Thank you.
Thank you all for being here today. It's been very interesting. I wish we had all day to speak to you.
I'm going to start with Mr. Trew. You had some strong words about what Canada's role should be here and what Canada's direction should be in these negotiations—literally to stop them. A lot of this centres around the combination of these ISDS mechanisms in free trade agreements along with the track record on human rights in many countries, especially in Latin America.
You mentioned that Ecuador had tried to get out of all its free trade agreements in 2017, after it was hit with a $2-billion claim through an ISDS process, I think from Occidental Petroleum.
I'm wondering if you could dive into this whole thing and why we can't get this right. Why do ISDS provisions always end up badly for countries, and especially for the people who are being affected by these Canadian investments in them and vice versa? Even in Canada, we are getting hit with ISDS claims by other companies. Could you dive into why we can't get it right and what you would suggest we do?