The difficulty with this bill is that it puts inadmissibility in the hands of Global Affairs Canada instead of in the hands of the IRPA.
We have a whole regime to govern inadmissibility, which has been in place for 20 years with the IRPA. It's very adept at treating individuals and giving them procedural fairness while still keeping bad actors out.
We have subsection 35(1), paragraphs (c), (d) and (e). That covers SEMA, the Magnitsky act and international sanctions for human rights violations primarily.
Expanding this inadmissibility regime beyond those to international economic sanctions is casting the net quite wide.