If the committee's mandate, the appointments and the chairmanship were permanent, you would be sitting at the same table for three or four years. A sort of camaraderie would develop around the table that is currently impossible. You would have to work together for three years. You could not be as partisan, no more than, for instance, two or three House committees with less partisanship, such as the Standing Committee on Procedure and House Affairs and the Standing Committee on Public Accounts, to name only two.
However, with a permanent mandate, a five-year plan, a vision and a goal in mind, I don't think you would be engaged the same kind of partisan politics.