Secondly, I'm going to give notice that I intend to move an amendment to the title of the bill, not to the body of the bill. It's really simple. It now refers to “age of protection”. I'm going to suggest that it refer to the age of consent, and I'll explain why later.
Mr. Moore and Ms. Morency have suggested that the proposed amendment would allow a retroactive decriminalization of sexual activity if the parties involved got married. As I read this, that's not the case. The exemption for being married only applies if the parties were married when the alleged offence took place. That is how I read the amendment, and I can't read it any other way.
Mr. Moore seems skeptical about that, but the purpose of this amendment is to remove from criminalization individuals who are legally married at the time when there may have been illegal sexual activity. The point is that they are legally married, and we can envisage, by the wording of this bill, the criminalization of two individuals who are married legally.
This bill is not about marriage; this bill is about sexual activity. We are, by the current wording of this bill, criminalizing sexual activity between two consenting persons who are married. Now, this is a very small number of people. There are only four or five in the whole of Canada that we're aware of now, plus other individuals who may be recognized as spouses in common law, the circumstances of which are already outlined in the bill.
So this is the only issue here for us, because the current government bill already exempts from criminalization individuals in this category who are married on the day the section comes into force. It doesn't deal with people who may have this problem later on in time. Mr. Comartin's amendment is intended to deal with those people later.
I'm of the view that if we, in our work here, can see a criminalization that is not intended, then we should not allow that bill to go forward. We should change it in a way that removes the non-intended criminalization. But if it is the view of members here that we wish to criminalize two consenting persons who are married in the future, albeit only a half a dozen or ten over time, then go ahead and pass the bill.
I wouldn't do that, and I would not shovel our unfinished business, our unintended criminalization, over to a criminal court for fixing, because they won't be too happy about that. They would rather say to Parliament that if we see a problem, we should fix it. If we see an overlap, if we see an inconsistency, we should fix it. If we see a constitutional problem, we shouldn't give it to the courts, we should fix it before it gets there.
Mr. Comartin's amendment comes down to this. The government has already fixed the problem of the criminalization of two persons who are legally married, one of whom is underage. The question is whether we will extend that protection, in the future, to other persons who are similarly legally married, one of whom is under the age.
Thank you.