Actually, the two amendments are intended to remove the minimum sentence of six months for motor vehicle theft. It applies from line 8 to line 12. That is the intent. If we remove the minimum sentence, we will no longer need the second paragraph, and that is actually the intent of the second amendment.
For once, I find it relatively lenient. It targeted a specific goal with moderation.
It is true that, generally speaking, I do not find minimum sentences to have sufficient effect on crime rates to make them into a habit. Recently, the Conservative government has consistently given us the impression that they really are making it a habit.
Personally, I am really afraid of this trend. It is an American trend and it gives the United States one of the highest incarceration rate in the world: over 760 inmates per 100,000 Americans. In Canada, we have between 103 and 116, according to last year's statistics. Canada is comparable to western Europe, Australia, New Zealand, and so on.
That is why I have a horror of using minimum sentences systematically. But I will say that I am in favour of some minimum sentences.
My position is not rigidly ideological. I agree with keeping them for murder, because it is one of the most serious crimes. Murder is voluntary homicide, so the criminal intent is really reprehensible.
For minor violations, I agree with minimum sentences for repeat offences. Drunk driving, for example, is a crime committed by people who are generally not criminals. Criminologists know that, in those cases, minimum sentences can have a positive effect, especially when they are kept for repeat offences. In cases like these, I acknowledge that we are dealing with repeat offences. That is why it seems to me, as a general principle, that those who want to impose a minimum sentence must bear the burden of proving that there is a real need for a minimum sentence in order to get a positive outcome and that there is no other way to do so.
Now, the statistics clearly show that the rate of motor vehicle theft has increased. With the minimum sentence disappearing in 1985—I rely on my colleague Mr. Petit for that, but I have not checked it myself—the increase was not that great, and, even then, it was followed by a drop. I feel that the statistics showing the drop prove once again that prevention measures often have a much better effect on the crime rate. The subsequent drop corresponds to the difficulty in stealing motor vehicles.
Because young people are committing a lot of motor vehicle thefts, we see very clearly... It is called joyriding. They are fascinated by cars. I went through that. Rest assured that I never stole a car, but I remember how fascinated people are by cars when they are young. It is a young person's crime. But you still need a certain amount of skill to get a car started without the keys.
With time, we have developed...then we got results. We often get better results through prevention. So there have also been campaigns to remind people to lock their car doors. You have seen that the crime rate keeps going down.
In spite of those changes, I do not see that the government has proved to our satisfaction that a minimum penalty is necessary. That I why I would stick to my general policy of being against minimum sentences as a principle, unless I can be shown convincingly that this minimum sentence will have a major, tangible major effect on the kind of crime we want to target.
That is why I share my party's view, one that we have consistently expressed in previous years when dealing with bills on this issue. I am not hiding the fact that these amendments that we are proposing are exactly the same as the ones that Réal Ménard proposed to similar provisions in previous bills on the same subject. I have the numbers of those bills somewhere.