Thank you, Mr. Chair.
Indeed, as officials, we see a potential problem with the transitional provision, especially toward the end, which might suggest that there wasn't the necessary authority at the time to establish the former versions of the Court Challenges Program. As we understand it, the goal seems to be to anchor the program in a new provision of the Department of Canadian Heritage Act. However, we think the government and the ministers at the time had all the authority they needed to establish the former versions of the program.
It's a bit of a fine legal point, but our perspective is that duly elected governments and ministers of the day had the authority under, among other things, the Department of Canadian Heritage Act to establish former iterations of the court challenges program. The transitional provision here could give the unintended suggestion that there was no authority previously to establish the program when, in fact, there was. It's suggesting that it's anchored in the new paragraph 5(a.1) of the act when, in fact, there was legislative authority for previous governments and ministers to establish the program.
We just want to avoid a bad suggestion. It may be a small point, but that's our legal view as public servants.