If we're envisioning it being taken on at the judiciary, then that's a legal question, not a regulatory one. That is an acknowledgement that it would require legislative changes.
Look at the situation with cellphones at the border. The access to information and ethics committee studied that issue. One consensus there is the notion of the suitcase. You have a reasonable expectation of giving up your privacy at the border, but that has changed in the advent of cellphones. As Ms. May and I pointed out yesterday in debating the definition of “publicly available information”, right now the courts are trying to sort out that notion. There have been several cases of people being asked to unlock their cellphones at the border.
I think this is relevant to the issue before us, this amendment, because at the end of the day, the solution to that issue is legislation, just as it would be with this bill. I don't want the minister deciding through regulation whether or not CBSA...and the same issue on the other side. I don't want the president—he has anyway but that's another discussion—signing executive orders that allow the searching of cellphones. That kind of purview should be in the hands of lawmakers and parliamentarians, and not decided through regulation.
I would say to Mr. Spengemann's point that, despite the expertise around ministers, it has been known to happen in the history of this country and other places that they don't always listen to those people around them. At the end of the day, they have political considerations to account for as well.
This is too much of a slippery slope and I think there are a multitude of examples that illustrate that.