As I mentioned in my remarks, pushing out the date of the application of the first-generation limit from 2009 to 2015 will essentially seek to delay the implementation of the first-generation limit to the later date. That means that those born abroad in the second generation or beyond—before 2015—will automatically be citizens from birth.
Previously—since 2009—they would have had to obtain a grant of citizenship, and those who are granted citizenship have the ability to automatically pass on citizenship to their future children born abroad.
With the bill converting those people to become automatically citizens from birth, that means they're then impacted by the first-generation limit and can no longer do so. That means that, if they have children born abroad in the future, they'll be considered second generation and, potentially, lost Canadians, as I mentioned in my remarks—