My understanding from reading the testimony and the original intent put through the other place on this bill was to keep the band of focus to a very narrow cohort, such as the scope of the private member's bill.
What I'm concerned about is that we are now amending the bill significantly out of scope, which to the testimony here, could impact unknown thousands of persons. It perhaps hasn't been given thought in the broader context of Canada's immigration goals and policies. For that reason, I think that it should be brought forward in government legislation as opposed to amending a private member's bill through a process that, frankly, was.... We had to go through a motion in the House of Commons to extend the scope.
I understand that as Canadians we want to be an open and welcoming country, that immigration is a core and vital part of who we are as a nation and that the government has an onus to welcome people, but we also have to do it in such a way that we are coordinated and thinking about all the resources we need to address appropriate integration and ensure fairness and equity.
My concern is that by amending a private member's bill in a way that is very much out of scope to what was first approved, we are now.... The department is saying that we don't know how many people could be impacted by this. For us to consider this just at clause-by-clause without having a fulsome analysis from the minister and whatnot, it doesn't fit within the responsibility of what we've been tasked with here. By amending this without further diligence or without the government putting forward a bill on this—or another private member's bill—it sets a poor precedent.
My argument, Chair, just based on the testimony from the department is that we don't know how the test would be applied. We don't know how many people it would be applied to, but the estimate is in the thousands. It hasn't been talked about in any way in the levels plan. Now we are going well beyond the scope of the initial mover.
For all of those reasons, I would implore my colleagues to either withdraw the amendments or to vote against them. Then perhaps we could issue a report as a committee, after we go through clause-by-clause on this, with recommendations to the government on other things that they should include in future government bills, like the things that are being proposed here.
I would be more comfortable with that, as a legislator. Otherwise, I would just implore colleagues to think about this precisely and rationally, as opposed to essentially putting forward government legislation through a private member's bill from a senator. I think it's grossly irresponsible.
Thank you.