 Good evening everyone. Happy Saturday everyone. Saturday is usually a time where we get together with friends, spend some time with the kids, with family. Obviously this is another different Saturday as we've had over the past few weeks. We need you to continue to stay home. We need you to continue to do everything we can to flatten the curve. Obviously there are sacrifices we're all making but it's beginning to work. We see promising news out of BC that over the past couple of weeks the measures taken in place by so many Canadians. The choices that Canadians have made have had an impact on the overall numbers but we need to keep it up. We need to continue to do what is necessary to prevent the spread of COVID-19 which means continuing social distancing, continuing to not go out unless you absolutely have to, continuing to think about caring for each other, thinking about protecting each other and thinking about protecting our health care workers and those essential workers who are doing such extraordinary service to keep things going, to keep us safe at the same time. It's a responsibility that we all share to stay at home, to try to do everything we can to prevent this pandemic from spreading or hitting more people. It's going to be extremely important that even on a beautiful Saturday, we stay at home, we stay in isolation and we don't take any measures that will risk our friends, our relatives or our health care workers. But as you know, we encourage people to stay at home, particularly if they have COVID-19 symptoms. We've been telling people particularly if you feel the onset of symptoms of a cold, of COVID-19, you need to stay home, you need to isolate, you need to not travel. People have been following that but I can enhance that we have formalized some of the domestic travel rules. As of Monday at noon, people showing any signs whatsoever of COVID-19 will be denied boarding on all domestic flights and intercity passenger trains. Today, I announce that Transport Canada has brought new rules for travel. Obviously, it has been said for a long time that if you have COVID-19 symptoms, you need to stop traveling, you need to stay at home. But from now on, on Monday at noon, if people are trying to travel by plane, domestically, or by trains between our cities, they won't be able to get any symptoms, no matter what the COVID-19 symptoms are. We need to continue to keep our distances from each other. We need to continue to protect ourselves. We need to continue to take responsible decisions. And I want to once again thank the millions and millions of Canadians who are doing exactly that. It's extremely important to be able to keep in safety, to be able to ensure that when this crisis is over, we will be able to resume normal life and continue to have a prosperous and healthy country. But it demands that everyone do their part today and for the coming days and weeks. Last night, I was lucky enough to do something that I love to do. I was able to spend a little time with the members of my youth council, the Prime Minister. For me, spending time with the young people, even if it's a virtual meeting, it's one of my favorite things, because it energizes me, it makes me understand how young people are interested and involved. I was accompanied by Minister Bardish-Chagger and two parliamentary secretaries, Adam Vancouverden and Darren Fisher. And we had a meeting, an open conversation with the young people of the Council across the country. The conversations I was able to have with the young people on the Prime Minister's Youth Council last night were extraordinary. Obviously, lots of questions and comments around COVID-19 and vulnerable populations from the north to internet access and broadband access for rural communities. Questions about what young people can do, questions around what they can tell their friends who are doing well or not doing well. Talks, conversations about mental health as well, because obviously this is a moment of anxiety and stress for so many people. This was a great conversation, like so many of the great conversations being had amongst Canadians across the country. Our young people specifically, we've been counting on them over the past years to continue to step up in the fight against climate change, in the fight against poverty, in supporting a better world internationally and at home. And we continue to need young people to be that vehicle for building a better future and sharing messages. Obviously, young people like every generation are chafing at the bit in terms of having to be self-isolated. Particularly at a time when we tell our young people at an age where we say now is the time to go out and discover the world, whether it's with a backpack or in a laboratory. Make new discoveries, challenge yourselves, challenge the world. And they're looking at their plans for the spring and their summer jobs and they're realizing that there is a massive anxiety and a massive uncertainty out there. But that doesn't mean we're powerless. Doesn't mean they're powerless. On the contrary, this generation of young people is so committed and engaged to creating a better world that we need you to keep leading the way you are. We need you to share your messages with friends. We need you to lead by example. We need you to be challenging and discovering the world in virtual ways. There are ways that you can continue to shape the future we all live in every single day, not just with your choices but with your leadership. And that's what we need. We need our young people to continue to challenge this world, to continue to push what is possible, to continue to want to be the leaders we need. And during these times of crisis, we still have more needs. So I'm counting on you, but I know that our present and our future is always between very good hands with our young people. We will also be there for you. As young people, there are many of you who are going to qualify for the Canadian Preciation for Urgence. There are others who are going to be supported in your work, in your work at the same time as part of the companies because of the help we give to small companies and small and medium-sized companies. But we will continue to look for ways to ensure that you have confidence, not just in the present but also in the future. We have taken significant measures to help people. Yes, young people who will many of them qualify for the CERB and be helped through the payroll subsidy, the wage subsidy we're creating for businesses and bringing up to 75%. But there's always going to be more to do and we're going to keep listening and looking how we can make sure that Canadians get through this in the best possible way by supporting them now and ensuring that we can roar back stronger once this is all done. That's why we put forward big measures to help businesses over the past few days. Increasing the wage subsidy to 75% means businesses across the country are now realizing they're going to be able to keep people on their payroll, keep that relationship going between them and their workers, and even rehire people who they didn't think they'd be able to support over the past two weeks. We know that what we do now to hold things together, to give people the ability to stay home, to isolate, to hold through this difficult time is key to how we will come back stronger afterwards. But we need to stick together and we need to do it. That's why we're helping small and medium-sized businesses and we're also making it easier to access the credit. Liquidity is going to be extremely important for people these days, to be able to borrow, for example, we're going to make $40,000 available through banks, no interest for the first year, and you won't have to pay $10,000 for that if the conditions are complete, if it goes well in the coming years. We're going to work together to ensure that we have the capacity to go through all of that. Our $107 billion plan has been passed to the Parliament. We have been able to really start delivering this aid to Canadians. We know that people are impatient, that it's going to be a big deal, and that we're working hard to deliver to Canadians quickly in these unprecedented situations. But that's exactly what we're going to do together. The Canadian emergency loan will offer you $2,000 every month for the next four months. Therefore, I invite you to sign up for my file on the Canada Revenue Agency so that you can submit a request as soon as the portal will be launched in the coming days. And if you can, sign up for direct deposit so that the money can be invested directly in your account. The Canada Emergency Response Benefit will give people $2,000 every month for the next four months to help get us through this time. I know an awful lot of people have showed interest in it, my recommendation to you is to go on the Canada Revenue Agency site and sign up in advance through my account links. Once you do that, in the coming days, when we're able to start actually opening applications, you'll have a head start. And if you can, please opt for the direct deposit option, which will let you get this money into your bank accounts sooner and is simpler for everyone as well. There are lots of things that we're doing to make sure that we get through this together. But everything we do, we need to do together. Every single individual, every single household has its role to play in making sure that Canada and Canadians do well through this. We also have a role to play in making sure that the world gets through this, both by modeling solutions and demonstrating what can be done when we all work together. This is going to be key, particularly as parts of the world that are much more vulnerable are beginning to get harder hit. We need to be able to get through this so we can help rebuild a world in which people can prosper and everyone has a real and fair chance to succeed. I know Canadians are up to this challenge. I know we're going to do this together. I have a lot of confidence in Canadians and in our ability to get through this because we do what we always do in difficult times. We'll be there, one for the other. Thank you everyone and have a good Saturday.