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Perrin Beatty, president of the Canadian Chamber of Commerce, said he strongly supports the TPP and thinks it’s in Canada’s best interest to ratify it.

“I suspect that what we’re seeing now is the country’s waiting to see what happens in the U.S.,” he said.

Though candidates there are committed to opposing the TPP, he added it may be possible to tweak or update the deal just enough to allow a new leader to own it.

Still, “there’s no question that we have seen a very powerful anti-globalization sentiment rising in the U.S. presidential election, and at this point, the temptation is to build walls as opposed to tearing them down,” said Beatty.

At the G20 summit, Canada is seen as one of the countries most open to free trade.

In a statement to the press in Hangzhou Sunday, Jean-Claude Juncker, president of the European Commission, called CETA, its Comprehensive Economic and Trade Agreement with Canada, the best and most progressive deal the EU has ever negotiated.

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau met with Juncker and European Council president Donald Tusk on the margins of the summit Sunday. They discussed CETA and agreed to “the importance of moving ahead expeditiously” with ratification, the prime minister’s office said.

CETA will likely be affected by the U.K.’s plan to leave the EU, and has been the subject of controversy in countries like Austria, Romania and Bulgaria, and now faces a challenge in Germany’s highest constitutional court. The U.S. free trade deal with Europe, meanwhile, is at a standstill.