In the first instance, I guess the Constitution currently provides for the process for selecting senators. When I say “process”, it's not much of a process. The Governor General summons persons to the Senate, and it's by constitutional convention that the process of the Governor General doing so is on the advice of the Prime Minister.
The Constitution also provides that if you're to change the process of selection of senators—as I just said, it's set out in the Constitution—that would require what's called a complex constitutional amendment with the engagement of the provinces. As I think we've indicated, there's little prospect of that happening in the short term. So the next best approach, from a democratic reform perspective, is to ascertain as strongly as possible the wishes of Canadians directly as to whom they would like to have represent them in the Senate, recognizing that Senate appointments currently, except in Quebec, are province wide. Of course, in the case of Quebec, there are provisions in the Constitution that senators are appointed for electoral districts--24 electoral districts in Quebec.
Those are the general parameters surrounding the Constitution and what's required currently within it. This bill is certainly designed with those in mind. As you mentioned, the bill is crafted so as to ensure we don't trip over those provisions and provide for a process that's not respecting those.
The bill provides a number of areas of flexibility for the Prime Minister in terms of when to use the consultation instrument and how to use it. It's the Prime Minister who's deciding the type of advice he would like to get from the Canadian public--it's advice to him--and then he can make his decision in terms of recommendations to the Governor General. It's a political imperative that's created, as Mr. Lukiwski mentioned, rather than a legal imperative. There's no obligation on the Prime Minister to select anybody from the list. Presumably there may be political consequences for a prime minister deploying an instrument such as this and then not relying on the results from it.
In that way it's very similar perhaps to another bill that's been passed by Parliament in this session, with respect to fixed election dates, where the prerogative of the Prime Minister has some self-imposed constraints put upon it. That's certainly what's happening here, again, respecting as that bill did, the constitutional limitations as to what the Prime Minister, the government acting alone, can do.