I forget what your first question was, but the answer I wrote down was “yes”.
No, the intent is to make it prospective, not just retroactive, not just grandfathered.
As to question two, with regard to toning it down, I did not think that, actually. My response here, in terms of changing the amendment, was that, in response to the suggestion from Mr. Lee, it was more proper from a drafting standpoint to put it in as a defence rather than to try to deal with it in this transition paragraph, as the government has done.
I thought I'd made it clear on Tuesday that what I was trying to do was provide protection to what I thought at that time was the potential for as many as 3,000 relationships to be criminalized on an ongoing basis. As I said to Mr. Dykstra, I think it's unrealistic for us to expect that at least a good number of those are not going to occur, and to criminalize them, I just wasn't prepared to do that.
Third, Mr. Bagnell, would I be satisfied with just the marriage? I guess my answer would have to be that you'll have to move that amendment if mine doesn't go through. Or perhaps you should move it now and delete the other parts of mine.
I'm having some difficulty accepting, as you can tell from my exchange with Ms. Morency, that there are only five marriages. I think we're talking a substantially larger percentage of those 200 to 300 annual relationships that we're trying to deal with here. I think there are more marriages in there that Statistics Canada just isn't catching. I'm not going to suggest it's even 50%—I don't think it is—but I would guess the rest of the numbers are about 50 to 100, somewhere in that range.