Thank you.
Again, thanks to all of you for coming. It's been an informative session.
Ms. Macklin, I certainly appreciate the fact that you filled in at the last moment, as did I, and as I suspect Mr. McKay did. We're all here on our helicopters trying to make sense of what we're hearing here.
I want to start by pointing out, my ancestors who came to Canada many generations ago were Huguenots. By the mores of the day, they were criminals. They were traitors. They were punishable by the worst possible punishment of the day, being burned at the stake. Even back then, Canada was rather welcoming, and they came here and settled and became fine, upstanding citizens. But by the laws of the day, they were treasonous criminals.
I suspect things have improved since then, but I will point out that we've had people in this country whom we've declared traitors, such as Louis Riel, whom later on we decided to pardon. Who's considered a traitor today is not necessarily a traitor tomorrow. These things can be subjective. I don't think we can hold an objective line to these things every time.
I'll remind people that just before the Second World War, Canada refused Jewish refugees from Germany. We didn't want them here. The minister agreed to that; our government agreed to that. Things change over time. What are the mores? What's acceptable and what isn't?
Let's fast-forward into what's going on today, and I don't want to repeat what Mr. McKay mentioned earlier, which I think was right on the money. Let's talk about a Canadian who is being held in Egypt, who I think Ms. Macklin mentioned briefly. All these people are considered traitors. All these people have committed heinous crimes by the terms and definitions that exist where they are. I think we're going down a path that could be considered dangerous, especially that there seems to be a serious lack of due process that's permitted by this bill.
Ms. Macklin, you mentioned section 11 of the charter. We need to have independent and impartial tribunals reviewing these things, yet by the terms of the proposed statute in front of us we're going to have ministerial discretion with leave for judicial review being the only possible third-party option for anybody being denied citizenship. So what are the terms of judicial review? What does it mean to have judicial review? What is the likelihood of even being accepted by a court to hear a judicial review?
Ms. Macklin, can you explain to me what judicial review is, and whether this is a sufficient remedy in the case of revoking citizenship?