Absolutely.
First of all, I was commenting on adequacy. You have to maintain a threshold to interact with Europeans in the Canadian realm. When you look at the elements, very simply, of how you deal with children's data and how you deal with political party data, I don't believe that would survive a test.
Politicians can talk all they want, but if it goes to court and the judge says...just like they did in the Schrems II decision, you get shut down, and then you have to fix it in an emergency. Again, why not do it right the first time to protect Canadian business and Canadian citizens?
Just do it right.