We'll both try not to be childish.
The 48 hours' notice we've had at this committee has worked well. The point of this motion is to try to make it fair for everybody, including members of the opposition.
The second part of that talks about the period of notice being calculated from when the motion has been distributed. We have traditionally accepted that and expected that we would have 48 hours' notice to treat people fairly at this committee. We can play. If you want to go one night before, everybody can start playing silly games, and we're going to have absolute chaos here. This is an opportunity to allow the clerk to distribute motions, 48 hours' notice—we're all on the same page—and then at the end there is a guarantee or a commitment that those motions come forward at the first committee meeting following the period of notice.
We've also been in a situation where we've had notices that haven't come forward immediately, and this brings that forward and allows members to bring their motion forward. It will be dealt with, and perhaps not finished at that meeting, but at least it will be brought forward. People can bring their motions forward, present them to the committee, and then the committee will decide what to do with them from there. Nothing here particularly benefits the government. I think it would clearly benefit the operation of this committee, particularly since we've worked on 48 hours' notice. We just want to make sure that 48 hours is fair to everybody, and that comes from the time the clerk distributes the motion. I don't think there's anything nefarious there. It's pretty clear, it puts everyone on the same page, and doesn't give us any particular advantage.