 Well, Dan, I'm going to come to you. You're going to speak more generally about the emergence of populism as a phenomenon in the European landscape, not least driven by this debate. Thank you very much for this opportunity, because first of all, it's good that you are speaking about the problems of migration and populism here in Morocco, in a successful country, in a country that was able to accommodate more than 50,000 of migrants from Sahel during last three years and was able to collaborate fruitfully with Spain and some other countries concerning protection of European borders. This is the success story, not only of Morocco, but also of Spain. And it can be an example of a good collaboration with partners of the European Union in our neighborhood. That's first. Secondly, the problem of migration is one of the main reasons for expansion of populism in Europe. And the government that the minister presents is a good example of this populist government that emerged in Central Europe that was known in the world during last 25 years as a protector of transition, protector of European values, and even projected European and democratic values abroad. Now in some countries of Central Europe and some countries of Western Europe, we have reemergence of two very dangerous tendencies, political tendencies. This is populism and nationalism. And there are regions like Catalonia, for example, that those two tendencies go together ahead, reinforcing each other. Populism has the same source. It is the convenience that establishments were not ready to deal with crucial issues in the European Union, migration, as one of those issues itself. But they create also major threats for democratic systems and reverses. And they reverse the tendency that was described by Schumpeter and Huntington as the third wave of democratization. Maybe from the perspective of American foreign policy, it is not so important. But American Freedom House, in its project Nations in Transit, observed that in 2018, it was the second year that more consolidated authoritarian systems than consolidated democracies. And it underlines that among 29 countries, 19, 19 had noticed declines in the overall democratic scores. Freedom House experts, of course, emphasized that illiberalism not became the main tendency in 2017. But effects of illiberalism, what Viktor Orbán presented as a concept of illiberal democracy, they were visible two years ago and one year ago so strongly. In central Europe particularly, this populism means that the people can go to the protest. Yes, they can do it. They can establish and conduct independent NGOs. Yes, they can do it, but many of them, or even majority of them, are supported financially by the states. So they are not independent in traditional approach. They, people can publish critical articles in some of independent media. In Hungary, the sector of independent media is very limited, very limited. In Poland, fortunately, independent media exists still as an important partner for civil society. But people know in Hungary, Poland and some other countries, that expressing themselves, they can have government inspections or a text can be a text in government-aligned media or even they can be under discrimination in employment. I do not want to say that those tendencies are similar to those that created the violent authoritarianism in Eastern Europe because what's going on in Russia and in some other post-Soviet republic is completely different shape. I want only to say that those tendencies visible in central Europe are visible also in some countries in Western Europe in which populists either win, are the one elections or are ready to win elections. We can see the results of the German election to Bundestag. 12.6% for AFD. In Bavaria, 12.4% for AFD. We can see ruling to parties in Italy. They don't undermine the institutional framework of constitutional democratic regimes, but they can do it because the source of Western European and Central European populism is the same. Thank you very much. Right, you've heard three interesting perspectives across the European landscape.