However, they're still guidelines. They're not law. My skepticism, of course, is....
I'll give you a couple of examples through the Investment Canada Act and a few other instances.
The minister of industry in 2017 didn't perform a detailed national security review of the takeover of Norsat by Hytera. That company, Hytera, went on, in January 2022, to be banned by President Biden and charged with 21 counts of espionage. Yet, we still had nothing in the industry department about this company, to the point where the RCMP, nine months later, bought sensitive communications equipment from Hytera while they were banned and charged with espionage in the United States. Then, in November 2022, the current Liberal minister ordered three Chinese companies to divest their ownership of three critical minerals companies. However, only three months later, in January, Minister Champagne failed to follow his own guidelines when he fast-tracked the takeover of a Canadian lithium company, Neo Lithium Corp., by a Chinese state-owned mining enterprise. That's where he's got the law.
Does the minister have the power and law now in existing legislation to ban companies from doing business in Canada, as they do in the United States?