I just have three quick points, Mr. Chair.
While I actually think the member did a pretty ingenious job of reworking our amendment, I compliment her for that, but I do want to acknowledge three things.
First, the difficulty is that the change forces the minister to act versus allowing him to act. I think that's a critical part of this. The amendment would give the minister the ability to act. It now would force him or her to act.
That leads to a second problem, which is that the minister of the day may have a specific reason to not act on this part of the bill if it's not in the best interest of Canadians or not in the best interest from a protection perspective.
Let me take that a little bit further, which is my third point. If the minister is forced to act and release someone, and that individual does something illegal and the questions arise as to why the minister allowed this individual to be free from detention and then this criminal act occurred, the minister's response can only be, “Well, I was forced to act because of the legislation.”
It behooves all of us, and I think it's more incumbent upon the minister who is in that position at the time, that there is ultimate responsibility that falls with the decision-maker versus looking to the legislation as either protection or as a fault. If someone were to be released, based on how this would currently be worded, as per the NDP amendment, it puts all of us as government members, regardless of which party we're in, in a vulnerable position based on what the legislation would say. It even puts the minister in a much more vulnerable position, because despite what the minister may believe to be in the best interest of Canadians, the minister is actually forced to act based on what this piece of the legislation would say.
I hope I've made it clear. We won't be supporting the subamendment. We believe the amendment the government proposes actually allows for everyone to see that the availability of implementing this option is available to the minister and it's in the legislation, but that we still grant the minister of the day the opportunity to make that decision on his or her own.