If you're voting on it, there may not be a whole lot that we can offer.
The element that I focused on in the comments and also in the submission relates to what seemed to be an expansion of CBSA and general Canadian government powers with respect to Canadians who were exiting the country. CBSA has traditionally been focused on keeping threats out of Canada and people who aren't authorized to be here and otherwise.
There seems to be an additional spreading of their attention to Canadians who are otherwise engaged in lawful activity, which can include leaving the country. The same powers that they're looking at, which they already have with respect to people and goods entering the country, they're looking to have for goods that are leaving. We don't see that that's necessarily proportional.
It's one thing to keep the theoretical bad guys out of Canada and CBSA is on the front lines of that. However, regarding the threat of things leaving Canada, well, you can unlawfully export a whole bunch of things, which I don't think requires the same commensurate power. There needs to be a proportionality. They shouldn't have the ability to pull any Canadian standing in a departure lounge into the back of the airport and interrogate them, where if they don't answer a question, they can be charged with obstruction. That seems to me to be a disproportionate response.