Mr. Chair, it is my intention to assert the privileges of members of Parliament in this committee; that is, it is my intention to make arguments to you, the chair, with respect to a matter of order. That is to make the point that at multiple committees in this House, at the citizenship and immigration committee, at the status of women committee and previously on multiple occasions at this committee—those are the cases that I know of in the last few months—members have proposed motions for adjournment.
Mr. Chair, who is the staff member you're consulting with? I hope you're listening to the arguments that are being made.
Mr. Chair, there have been multiple instances in this Parliament in multiple committees where members have moved motions to adjourn with conditions, and those motions have been deemed debatable. Ms. Zahid, the chair of the immigration committee, Ms. Vecchio, the chair of the status of women committee, and your predecessor, Mr. Spengemann, have all ruled those motions to be in order.
Now we have a new chair, after the resignation of Mr. Spengemann, who all of a sudden wants to overrule the precedent on this matter. Parliament should be guided by precedent. Precedent is the basis on which we understand the interpretations of these rulings. That precedent has consistently been, at multiple committees in various committees of this House, that when there is a substantive motion on the table, it is considered legitimate to move an amendment motion with a condition. While it is not acceptable to move a different substantive motion on a different matter, when it is an adjournment motion with a condition then it is legitimate to do so.
Now, insofar as that is a grey area in the rules, because the rules don't specify with respect to an amendment motion with a condition, we should be guided by the precedent, by the precedent of multiple committees, including by this committee.
What you're saying is to try to overrule the precedent and the ruling of the previous chair without even giving opportunities for other members to hear arguments.
That is outrageous, Mr. Chair, and we're not going to function very well as a committee if you show such flagrant disregard for the rights of members.