Thank you, Mr. Chair.
I want to clarify what's being proposed. The norm is that in the round of questioning, it would be a member of the Liberal Party, then a member of the Bloc, then a member of the NDP Party, and then a member of the government party, the Conservative Party. That's the first round. After that, in the second round, it would be a member of the Liberal Party, a member of the Conservative Party, a member of the Bloc, then a Conservative, and then the NDP, and a member of the Conservative Party.
The result in that is that at the end of those rounds, every member of the committee has had an opportunity to ask a question and nobody is getting multiple opportunities. That's the fair, traditional way the witnesses are being questioned.
In what is being proposed now, the first round is typical, but for the next and subsequent rounds, the first round is repeated, and repeated, and repeated, and repeated, so that the proportion of opportunity for questions is skewed.
The point I'm trying to make is that we would have the Bloc having twice as many opportunities to question as it has members on the committee, and the NDP would have four times the opportunity to question the witnesses as it has in representation on the committee. You end up with people not being given opportunity to question, and some people having, in Mr. Cullen's case, four times the opportunity to question. That's not fair, and it's not traditionally done.
So that's why I think there's opposition to this motion. We need to stick with the tradition of fairness.