National security bill will help combat homegrown extremism: Goodale
The Liberal government’s sweeping national security bill will make it easier to combat homegrown extremism by improving flawed antiterror provisions, Public Safety Minister Ralph Goodale says.
Goodale pointed Thursday to a measure in the bill that would clarify a prohibition against promoting terrorism offences in general — a provision on the books he calls “virtually unusable” because it is too vague.
The Liberal government’s security legislation, tabled in June, would narrow that wording and flesh out campaign promises to revise other elements of C-51, a contentious omnibus bill brought in by the Harper government after a gunman stormed Parliament Hill in October 2014.
The Liberal bill would limit — but not eliminate — powers that allow Canada’s spy agency to actively disrupt terror plots, ensuring such operations are compliant with the Charter of Rights and Freedoms.
It also forges new paths for Canada’s security services in crunching huge datasets and waging cyberoperations, and bolsters accountability and review in the often maze-like world of intelligence. The legislation has drawn barbs from both major opposition parties. The Conservatives accuse the government of being soft on terrorism, while the NDP say the Liberals haven’t done enough to reverse the Harper-era measures. Goodale told the House of Commons public safety committee Thursday that simply repealing all of C-51 would be “like trying to unscramble eggs” because pieces are now embedded in different laws.