To follow up on Mr. Bergeron, it was news to me that there's not going to be a Canada-China special committee. Maybe I'm outside those discussions, and that may be a negotiation happening among parties to which I'm not party, so I don't know. I'm not even sure...If it hasn't happened, I'm not sure how we know something hasn't happened, because it just hasn't been brought up yet, but maybe I'm outside the loop on that one, which is fine.
I'm not opposed to our doing work on the Canada-China relationship in this committee. It was my argument in the last Parliament, when that special committee was set up, that we are the foreign affairs committee, and it is a good place to discuss all our relationships. My concern is that we find a procedure to address all the possible work in a way that looks at the world, because right now we have a critical issue in Ukraine and we have issues going on in Ethiopia. We have a number of issues that are really quite timely that I think Canadians want us to discuss.
It would be very appropriate to find a way to have input from all the parties—from the Bloc, the NDP, the Liberals and the Conservatives—and get those motions into the subcommittee on agenda. We can then have the subcommittee on agenda present a proposal for this committee to deal with as a whole with respect to what we do, and when and how we do it. It's not to preclude that we wouldn't do China right away if there is no special committee, but it also doesn't tie us if there is a special committee on China.
I know that on the government side there are four or five motions that have not yet been submitted as notices of motion. We can obviously put in motions today when we're in a business meeting, but to be thoughtful and fair, and to look at our work in an orderly way, I would like us to consider that we set a date by which all notices of motion should be in. I'm not precluding that there are ways to always.... We pass routine motions about those motions, but we could set up a kind of first tranche of topics, have the agenda committee meet on them, set some priorities based on input from all the parties, and then come back to a meeting of this committee to make a decision on whether or not to accept the report of the subcommittee.
I may need some help from the clerk on what an appropriate timeline would be to make sure we get a good set of motions, because the motions from previous Parliaments are no longer available. They're gone. We would want to make sure that every member has a chance to put in some motions so that we don't jump over the goodwill of any member of the committee because we decide to study something right away today.
I'm prepared to make a motion on that if that's deemed in order, but we have a motion on the floor from Mr. Chong. I'm not quite sure how we would do that, because I don't want to defeat that motion. We may want to support it, but to be fair to the committee, we should be looking at everything, or at least five or six things, to decide what we'd want to do first, second, third and fourth.
We need a little bit of help from the clerk on two things: how we can we dispose of that motion in a way that is within the Standing Orders and how can we keep it available for discussion at the subcommittee along with other issues; and what an appropriate timeline would be for us to work with to make sure every member of the committee, regardless of how big their party is, is heard on this issue.