First of all, we want to acknowledge all the effort that has been made in the past week by this committee to ensure that Canada gets the robust and fair foreign interference legislation it needs and deserves.
Regarding a definition for intimidation, again, our primary concern is not that it's ill defined but that it's simply not defined. As to what we would view as a sufficient definition of intimidation, I truthfully can't speak about that at the moment. We would have to conduct a more robust review of the bill ourselves. However, our primary fear, as Nusaiba mentioned, is that if the bill were passed tomorrow, a current government could identify protest activities it doesn't agree with and penalize them under the pretense that they are aiding a foreign entity. The lack of definition opens up the doors for usage on both sides of the coin. You could have a government that would penalize convoy protesters or, as Nusaiba said, Black Lives Matter protesters.
We are happy to provide recommendations in regard to what a definition of intimidation would look like, because in our technical briefing, we didn't get a direct answer. There wasn't an outlined definition of intimidation. We would be happy to provide that later on.