Yes, thank you.
The reference in the bill to section 35 is one that, again, has been the source of some misunderstanding in some of the debate. Section 35 is in the Constitution Act. It was hard fought for. There are many first nations across Canada that have fought hard to get their rights affirmed through section 35, and they would very much like to have that there.
However, we know that in interpreting section 35, there have been decisions made over the years in a process that has not fully supported reconciliation and not fully supported this. There are concerns about some of those decisions and their harshness. But referring to section 35 is something that is pretty straightforward, because we already have it in the Constitution Act.
The idea is not in any way to limit the UN declaration to some sort of context of what was decided in an individual case. That's not how legislation works, and that's not how section 35 works. We're creating space with this bill to breathe greater life into section 35, but for those first nations who choose not to want to take their cases to court or to advance their rights in the context of section 35 and prefer to rely on, for instance, their treaties specifically, there's nothing that's limiting them.
I would say that the language, and in particular the proposals the AFN has brought forward, has been carefully prepared for you and your recommendation at this level by the national chief based on feedback and input from the chiefs of Canada. That is where it comes from. We are recommending some improvements to the text to be able to provide greater support for first nations who have brought forward these concerns. We don't think these are major corrections or changes. It's just a question of this being your opportunity to refine and improve the bill, and we are recommending some refinements and improvements to you.