I'm going to assume that all of my colleagues around the table are proceeding in good faith, and we're not just going to be entering back into something that has been a problem, historically, with this committee, which is delaying and filibustering and throwing up procedural roadblocks in order not to get to just regular business, but here is how this actually went down.
First of all, committee business is always in order. It's always in order.
Second, you don't need a written motion to bring up something that's already been discussed. It's already part of the existing fabric of the business of the committee. You need 48 hours' notice for a new motion that has not been brought to anybody's attention.
Third, we discussed this issue and raised the issue at our last committee business meeting, and I appreciate, in fairness to Mrs. Gray, Mr. Bezan and anybody else I can't see who wasn't there, that they weren't there at it. Mr. Chair, you've pointed that out.
When we were discussing the fall schedule, we specifically mentioned that this bill was sitting on our docket and that it would be reported back to the House, unamended, unless we asked for an extension. We put a pin in that, recognizing that we were going to have to come back to this.
The next thing is that, in terms of those who don't want to deal with it today, we either deal with it today or we deal with it on Tuesday. Both days are identical days. They are days when we're scheduled for pre-budget hearings—today or on Tuesday.
This is not a substantive issue. This is an issue of whether we want to give ourselves an extra 30 days so that we can actually look at the bill.
I understand that this is a Conservative bill. If we don't do this, the bill will likely go back to the House, and it could very well be defeated. If we don't have a chance to actually hear some evidence on it and to consider the bill, then I don't see how that does any service or is of any assistance to the drafter of the bill, who I believe has worked hard to get it to this point. We all know that it's rare to get a PMB past second reading to committee. If it's at committee, that person deserves to have this committee take a look at the bill.
All we're asking for here is to give this committee a little more time in which to consider the bill. There's nothing untoward. There's nothing procedurally incorrect. There's nothing by surprise. There's nothing substantive. This is, frankly, a garden-variety housekeeping measure that we had identified as needing to be taken care of.
Frankly, Mr. Chair, I think it was wise and deft of you to leave it to the end of this meeting so that we got to hear from the witnesses. Nobody anticipated that there would be any opposition to this, and so far, I haven't heard a substantive reason. Do any of my Conservative colleagues not want to consider the bill?
Do you think it's better to have the bill reported back to the House with no examination by the committee? That's what will happen. What is the advantage of waiting until Tuesday when we would have the exact same conversation as here today? Mr. Chambers is making veiled attempts to bring in the bullpen. Are they suggesting a midnight filibuster over this profoundly insignificant issue of whether we grant ourselves a 30-day extension today or on Tuesday? Seriously...? That's not serious. Those aren't serious parliamentary intentions, I don't think.
Let's go to a vote. If you don't want to give the 30-day extension, then vote against the motion. If you do, then vote for it. We'll let the will of the committee prevail, but this is not an issue that should be holding up....
My last point is that none of this bears, in any way, on the good faith that we all brought to bear last week or the week before that in coming to the fall schedule. We specifically identified this issue as one that could be dealt with. There's no subterfuge. There's no sneakiness. There's no resiling on any agreement. There's no backsliding. We're dealing with a piece of business that we said we were going to deal with, frankly, at almost the last possible moment.
Whether we do it today or whether we do it Tuesday, the committee members are going to have to make a decision on whether we want this bill to be reported back to the House without examination or whether we want to give ourselves a little bit of time so that we can actually schedule a day or two to bring in the sponsor of the bill, who I think probably wants to come to the committee and have a chance to speak to the bill. That would also give us a chance to actually have a little sober thought.
My last point is this: If we have one duty as parliamentarians, it is to examine legislation that comes before us.
I think it's the height of irresponsibility to take a position that would see a bill that we want a chance to take a look at and to hear a bit of evidence on in the only part of the legislative process that actually allows for some evidence.... For anybody here to say, “No, we don't want that,” and to let the bill go back without any of that scrutiny, examination, evidence or consideration, that, to me, is a dereliction of our duty as parliamentarians.
This is much ado about nothing, and I think we should just get on with the vote. If people want to vote against it, vote against it, but let's not hold up the committee business and all the important things that we're going to do.
My final final point is this. Mr. Chambers is correct. I did not burden the process by demanding that any particular issue of mine be put forward. I deferred so that the Conservatives got two of their priorities folded into the fall agenda. The pre-budget hearings, notionally, I guess, it could be argued, are something of an advantage to the government, since it will be their budget, and my Bloc Québécois colleague also got something, because we're folding in his study as well.
Nobody's trying to go backwards on anything. There's no benefit to anybody by pushing this motion. It's just good committee management. Let's put the swords down. Let's all catch our planes tonight—those who need them—and let's make a sound democratic decision on this and move forward.