That is exactly—almost in those words—something we addressed with President Trump and his future cabinet secretaries on Friday evening at Mar-a-Lago.
The Prime Minister said, when he was talking about their concerns around, for example, fentanyl, precursor chemicals and drugs, that we have for a long time worried about illegal firearms being smuggled into Canada. The RCMP and the CBSA have talked to me about that.
We need to work with American partners. We made the point to him that it's something we want to do in partnership with them. The FBI and the U.S. Customs and Border Protection have a role to play. The CBSA, as I noted, has done some good work in that area, but again, we need to continue to lean in on that, because that particular issue is having devastating consequences for law enforcement officers and citizens in cities big and small across the country.
The conversation was very much that this is a bilateral and binational challenge. We talked about cocaine and methamphetamine that come into Canada from the United States. We wanted to impress upon the Americans that not only do we share their concerns, but we have our own as well.