Thank you, Mr. Chair.
Although I don't want to repeat what's already been said, I do want to voice my opposition to the motion. I want to commend the independent members who submitted the letter calling on us to reject the motion. In my view, a lot of effort was put into the letter, which provides a history of the parliamentary procedures and rights of independent members and members of parties not recognized by the House. I won't repeat what the letter says, but I hope it will be published because it provides a good history.
I would like to point out that we first found ourselves in this exact situation when the last budget implementation bill was introduced. That was also the first time we saw the proposal set out in the motion being used. Just this past spring, then. To my knowledge, the question had never been raised prior to the spring.
Up to that point, it was clear that independent members and members of parties not recognized in the House could take part in a committee's proceedings and attend its meetings. It was also clear that the House recognized their fundamental rights when it came to proposing amendments to the budget implementation bill, specifically.
It was clear that this motion, which we voted against but which the committee adopted during its study of the last budget implementation bill, was specifically aimed at forcing independent members to give the committee notice of their amendments or changes without being able to debate them. They can, however, do that in the House. Consequently, they may be prohibited from moving those same amendments later in the House. So, as a result, they have much less power, not just all around, but also specifically, in terms of debating the amendments, because they aren't allowed to engage in meaningful debate on the amendments they wanted to propose. Conversely, they can do so in the House, generally speaking.
In that respect, then, independent members are being denied their rights, a situation we, on this side of the House, consider unacceptable. Once again, this is clearly a government tactic to prevent them from contributing. I find it appalling. I recall that the Speaker of the House of Commons had ruled on a matter of privilege, but I think the issue is serious enough for him to rethink the whole thing or, at the very least, consider the impact it will have on the rights of each and every one of us.
Independent members represent the people in their ridings, regardless of the fact they don't represent a party with enough members to enjoy the resources of the House. The fact remains, they represent constituents, just as those of us who belong to recognized parties do.
From that perspective, the motion will seriously undermine the rights of constituents in those members' ridings. In fact, those Canadians will be under-represented in the House and in committee, as opposed to our constituents and those of the government members.
With that in mind, I urge the government to reconsider the motion. And I hope it will do so in all the other committees, where the motion will be put forward if it hasn't already been. Government strategy, not the initiative of the individual who proposed the motion, clearly underlies this coordinated effort.