Thank you.
I would like to thank Mr. Barlow and Mr. Kelloway for their thoughtful questions. I think Mr. Thériault is correct that there's a little bit of complexity here, but I think it can all come together.
The reason Ms. Sidhu's motion makes sense is that my motion is simply trying to deal with the remaining meetings we have before Christmas—and, by the way, what else is there to deal with? I think I can say without offending anybody that we've wasted a lot of time in the last couple of months. What I'm trying to do is get an orderly system of business so that we can get down to hearing witnesses both on the PMPRB study and on COVID. That requires us to determine what our remaining four meetings in the next two weeks are going to be.
The reason that Ms. Sidhu's motion is entirely in order is that if you go back to the motion we passed setting up the COVID study, we said that once we determine the order of issues, then it would be Liberal, Conservative, Bloc and NDP, in that order. We left it open to the committee to vote by majority as to how many meetings would be allocated to each topic.
Now we know that the Liberals want to proceed with mental health. That's established. We know we have three meetings on COVID before Christmas, according to my motion, if it passes. The question before this committee is how we are going to use those three meetings. The Liberals have said mental health, so now we have to determine whether we will have one, two or three meetings on mental health.
It's entirely in order and it is entirely sensible, because if the Liberals said they want to study mental health but we only want one meeting on it, then we would schedule that for the second meeting next week, and then we would have two more meetings on COVID, at which time we would proceed to the Conservatives' topic. Then we would take their first priority and have a discussion about how many meetings the Conservatives would like on that topic, ranging from one to four. Of course, we can have more by, I think I said, unanimous consent. The range of one to four meetings was to ensure that every party would get at least one meeting devoted to their topic, but no more than four.
I hope that we can proceed to the vote on this motion now, because otherwise, if we don't pass this today, despite everybody's pronouncements about how important these issues are to them, we're not going to be able to move ahead with any of them with the remaining four meetings we have—not PMPRB, not COVID. I would like to move forward on both of them.
I'm agnostic on the number of meetings. I do think all of us agree on mental health being an important issue. The issue of vaccines was the NDP's number one topic. I don't know if we've distributed the topic choices, but my number one pick on the COVID study was vaccines, so I empathize with Mr. d'Entremont's comments on that.
The reality is that we're not going to be able to get to everything or do justice to the subjects. Let's honour the motion we passed. We said we would go in order. The Liberals have identified their issue. We just have to determine how many meetings we want allocated to mental health. They want four. That's fine with me. When we come back after the holiday season, we will finish off that fourth meeting and then we will proceed to the Conservatives' next choice. Hopefully, before we break for the holidays, we'll determine how many meetings are appropriate for the Conservatives' next choice as well. That gives the analysts January to schedule those witnesses and for us to get our witness lists in.
Please, let's get down to business and start getting witnesses before this committee and do the work we're supposed to be doing here.