 Thank you all for being part of such an important global forum. A few weeks ago, I met Amina, a mom who started her own farm and local business in Canada. Amina's proud of what she's accomplished and rightly so. But from finding good childcare to working in an industry dominated by men, she told me it hasn't been easy. As leaders and governments, that's something we have to listen to. We have to listen when women who do a double shift say they need quality childcare. When girls say they need access to education. When racialized women and indigenous women and LGBTQ2 people say they need justice. We have to listen and then we have to act. With concrete actions, we can create the real positive change in the needs of the population. Take, for example, childcare. The pandemic has made it clear what parents and feminists have been doing for decades. Child care services are a necessity. That's why, in April last year, we expected $30 billion to build a pan-Canadian system of child care and learning. These child care services, affordable and quality, will allow about a quarter of a million mothers in Canada to return to work. While we're getting back to this pandemic and putting forward a feminist relaunch, it's exactly the kind of results we need, not only in Canada, but everywhere around the world. That's why Canada is stepping up significantly, not only at home, but around the world. Our government is investing $100 million to support paid and unpaid care work globally. This new commitment makes Canada the largest national donor to the care economy worldwide. And when it comes to a feminist recovery, we're not stopping there. We're going to continue partnering with feminist organizations at home and around the world because in the last five years, we've seen what we can achieve by working together. I think of the almost 25 million children whose lives have been changed for the better by the Global Partnership for Education. A partnership Canada will continue to support. I think of the 100 feminist organizations supported by the Fund for Equality, which Canada has launched, which serves to defend workers' rights and to help health clinics. Or the financing of almost $80 million for women and girls conversed by the Coalition of Action here at the Generation Equality Forum. In all, if we combine this investment and commitment aimed at paying care, it's $180 million that we invest here at the opportunity of this forum to advance sex equality. But, my friends, this is just the beginning. Our world is at a crossroads. The path ahead, well, it's the one being built by women and girls, by feminist movements and women's organizations, and by people in all their diversity in every corner of the globe. This is a generation that believes in a better future for everyone, and this is a generation that knows we cannot get there if anyone is left behind. In other words, this is a feminist generation, and it needs feminist governments to stand with it.