There is actually a very strong debate in Ecuador about exactly this topic. The president has been elected in a very murky context, with the prior president having abandoned the presidency by a process known as “crossed death”. Being elected, he had to face a security crisis. Through the security crisis that he's managing right now, he's trying to push forward a referendum that would suspend article 422 of the constitution, which actually says that Ecuador cannot subscribe to a trade agreement that contains ISDS dispositions.
It's a very tough situation in which an agro-export elite that is now in government is trying to push through, in a very short period, a situation in which the main forces in the legislature, which is not majoritarian—they have 51 seats—are actually the ones who pushed forth this constitution 15 years ago.
It's really a tough debate in which Canada, by exerting pressure on this trade agreement, is really siding with one side here.