I told the president that we would be moving forward with retaliatory equivalent tariffs as of July 1, and he expressed to me that he thought that would be a mistake. And I certainly agree that it’s not something that we want to do. We do not want to harm American workers. We do not want to harm trade between Canada and the United States. But the administration’s choice to impose illegal and unacceptable tariffs, illegitimate and unacceptable tariffs to Canadian steelworkers and autoworkers and on the Canadian economy, must be met with an equivalent response. We know a renegotiated Nafta is good for Canada, good for the United States and good for Mexico. And as the president, the vice president, many people have said, it’s possible to get to a win-win-win, and that’s exactly what we are going to continue to work to do. If you put an expiry date on a trade deal, that’s not actually a trade deal. So that’s our unequivocal position. There will not be a sunset clause. Canada has been unequivocal that we will not, cannot sign a trade deal that expires automatically every five years. That is not a trade deal.