It is.
I don't think anybody wants to leave this process, Mr. Chair, and deliver up ineffective legislation. I'm sure the writer of the private member's bill wants to see it work. We've got expert advice sitting in front of us here. We've received government amendments that are longer in text, I believe, than the entire Bill C-307 itself. I haven't heard, as a member of Parliament, the overarching rationale for these changes. It would be helpful, I think, for all members of Parliament to hear where this is taking us.
I think Mr. Cullen is absolutely right when he talks about one change having distributive effects later on and effectively gutting the bill. I don't think anyone is interested in gutting the bill. I assume we want to work and come out of here with a good piece of legislation that will achieve the ends that Mr. Cullen has put in terms of the overall essence of the bill.
I have heard nothing, but I have received and have had deposited in front of me 16 separate amendments from three parties. It would be useful not to commit to anything at this stage, but to hear what the rationale is here. Have we got this so fundamentally wrong?
I don't think, Monsieur Bigras, with all respect, that we can go on and consider these one after the other, rule them in or rule them out, and make changes if we don't have some overarching understanding of what the government is proposing. That would be my suggestion.
Can we hear a generalized statement? We were beginning to hear a statement from, I think, one of our witnesses, or perhaps Mr. Warawa. To put us in a situation where—This is not an apples and oranges situation. I don't think we want to say to Mr. Cullen that we're going to rewrite his bill completely, that it's going to be unrecognizable when it comes back to the House of Commons. But we need some kind of statement as to where we're going here.