Monsef situation is NOT relevant. There was no misrepresentation. The discrepancy in place of birth was not material. There was no fraud. There are no grounds at all for pursuing revocation of Monsef's status.
The Monsef situation has NO relevance to what is proposed or not proposed in Bill C-6, NO relevance to the progress or lack of progress in getting the Bill adopted.
In particular, there is no basis for revoking Monsef's status.
Insinuations otherwise, from a couple lawyers representing refugees and others who face potential revocation for fraud, are unfounded efforts to associate an incidental discrepancy, such as the one regarding actual location of birth in the Monsef situation, with defenses to fraud based on claims of innocent mistake. There may indeed be some unfair or unjust overreaching in the revocation proceedings based on alleged fraud, so the lawyers probably are trying to raise public awareness of a legitimate problem, but to the extent there is a problem it is in the procedure which provides minimal safeguards and exposes naturalized citizens who might be unfairly targeted and who might not get adequate notice, and moreover the procedure tends to shift the burden to the targeted citizen, at least in effect.
What underlies the lawyers's unfounded insinuations about Monsef is that they are essentially saying that any discrepancy could trigger a revocation proceeding and under the current procedure the targeted citizen might not have adequate notice or opportunity to defend against the unfair, unjustified revocation proceeding. That is, what they are saying is that in the Monsef situation, the government might proceed to revoke citizenship even though there is not really a proper ground for doing so and that (they allege) there are scores of naturalized citizens who are indeed the victim of such injustice.
Reminder: the old process required a Federal Court justice review the application to revoke citizenship before the process could proceed, and all it took to trigger this requirement was a request by the targeted citizen, and beyond that there were additional safeguards and hurdles the government would have to overcome, and then the Governor General would have to review the application to revoke, and that was subject to judicial review. The current (Bill C-24 implemented) process does indeed bear greater risks of injustice.
But again, overall, there is nothing about Bill C-6 which is related to or affected by the Monsef situation. Nothing at all.