I think that, at present, the concern is that the provisions you are referring to could prevent the process from moving forward. That is our concern.
The objective of the bill is to improve the quality of the management and administration of public funds. If the complaint itself is justified, any government that wants to improve its processes has an obligation to proceed with the complaint.
In its current form, the provision you're referring to can prevent us from improving management processes in the public sector under the pretext that a person's intentions have been determined. The cost of maintaining this provision as it stands appears to outweigh the benefit.