I thank Ms. May for this.
It's trying to make a bad situation a little bit better. If the government's understanding is that they only seek to restrict or deny so-called bogus or denied claims, then certainly they can vote for something like this because the intent is very clear.
Further to the previous amendment, Mr. Caron had a very sage point, which is that we also heard testimony that these will likely face constitutional challenges, which are extraordinarily expensive for both the litigants and the government to defend.
We've seen this movie before, with the government moving legislation and amendments to legislation that then gets challenged all the way up to the Supreme Court. The government has a terrible track record in their defence of their legislation on constitutional grounds.
For both the humanitarian and, I would argue, taxpayers' rights on this, why seek to spend so much money denying basic human rights, which is contained within the provision of social assistance to those who are still in the refugee claimant process?
That's who these people are. We can't call them something else when they're not, especially when we have an amendment that is trying to make something a little bit better.