Thank you, Mr. Chair.
I think it's important to put on the record that the Harper government was extremely cautious on China. After the Nexen deal, they put additional limitations on investments. Throughout the Harper years, they were getting pressured by the then opposition Liberals to be less cautious and more full steam ahead.
I think it's fair to have a discussion about what aspects of those policies could have been different, but it's not as if there was no daylight between the Liberal and Conservative positions at the time. The Conservatives took a very different approach—a much more cautious approach. When the Liberals came into power, they were talking about not only free trade with China but also an extradition deal with China. That was after the arbitrary detentions of the Garratts, Huseyin Celil and others. I'm glad the detention of the Michaels ended up being a wake-up call. Frankly, it wasn't the first—nor will it, sadly, be the last—case of arbitrary detention. This Liberal government, coming into office in 2015, should have known better.
Mr. Rosenberg, you said something about the ambassador in China introducing these donors to the Trudeau Foundation. Could you share which ambassador that was and when that introduction took place?