Mr. Speaker, as has been said in this debate, the Prime Minister of Canada has this on his agenda. He has already raised the issue with the American administration, with the President. It has been raised in a number of ways at a number of times.
We also have cabinet government in our country. The Prime Minister is seized with the issue at his level. However, Minister of Natural Resources, the Minister of International Trade, the Minister of Foreign Affairs, a number of ministers have this on their plate and are working in concert also with the Ontario government. This is what we do. It is not all on one person's plate. That would be an unwise way to act. The way to act is to ensure the Prime Minister raises the issue, raises it well and ensures his ministers, the people around that cabinet table, are raising it with their people.
I want to give a shout-out to the Canada-U.S. parliamentary association. It raised the issue with its counterparts, and we do that with legislators across the country. I see the chair from Malpeque is in the room. We also raised the issue with the special committee on Canada-U.S. relations. This is parliamentary. It is government. It is provincial. It is federal. It is industrial. It is civil society.