I would like to make a suggestion to committee members. I do not know whether my colleagues would agree with asking Mr. Walsh, the House law clerk and parliamentary counsel, to give us a brief legal opinion about the Speaker's authority to prevent a member who has been expelled from the House from having access to the parliamentary precinct. I do not know whether that violates any rules.
Mr. Godin remembers that Mr. Marleau said that this was done in London. Let us assume that a member of Parliament did something that meant he could not sit in the House for the rest of the day. The member must continue to do his or her work as an elected representative from his or her office on Parliament Hill.
I would like the law clerk and parliamentary counsel to give us an opinion on this matter. He doesn't need to write a book on it, because we will not have time to read it. He could simply tell us whether changing the Standing Orders would violate a member's privilege. I would like his opinion on the matter, despite the fact that this is the practice in England. If he wants to check on the reasons why this is done in England, he could do so. That is my first suggestion.
I would also like to inform my colleagues that when we do study the report, we should talk about decorum, something some parties use more than others. I don't want us to get into a game where people say things like “my dad is stronger than your dad” or “I am a nice guy and you are not”. I don't want to get into games of that type.
As you know, in the past I compiled some statistics. I stopped doing that, because with my colleague, the deputy whip, I found I was getting in too bad a mood, and that my blood pressure was rising. I kept some statistics on members of Parliament who stood to applaud a minister's answer or a member's question. This meant the House wasted 8, 10, 12 or even 20 seconds.
I would like to tell my colleagues, the other whips, who are present here that I have doubts about our real desire to regulate ourselves, because when I raised this issue, it led to a rather heated exchange with Mr. Hill. We said we would raise the issue with the members of our caucus. But what happened was that after question period, after the caucus meetings that morning, when I had raised the issue the Tuesday before, the Conservatives stood to applaud eight times and the Liberals six times. That was a Guinness record for this nonsensical practice of standing to applaud. People laugh at us for doing this. The Minister of the Environment yaps and his colleagues stand and applaud him for putting down the questioner. The questioner who was put down, fires the question back at him, and once again the colleagues rise to applaud the effort. We look ridiculous, this becomes a real circus.
In the report, I hope there would be reference to having the Speaker use his discretion to cut off planted questions from Conservatives. I said this to Mr. Hill, who said to me, quite honestly, right in my face: “Michel, I don't give a damn whether he cuts off planted questions. Let them be penalized for the planted questions.”
A member who planned to ask planted questions of a minister and who has informed his local media and community to watch because he would be asking a question about the Pont de Québec in Quebec City the next day might not find it amusing to have the Speaker prevent him from asking his question.
Under this government, the only things that can be cut off are not ministers' answers, but rather the three planted questions. If we in the other parties—the Liberals, the New Democrats and the Bloc Québécois—are too demonstrative, the Speaker cuts off one of the questions scheduled on the list.
According to my statistics, the two parties that were penalized—and this is why Mr. Godin is angry and why I am starting to get hot under the collar—that had questions taken away, were the Bloc Québécois and the NDP.
We said that we were not in a church or at a wake. It is true that people get carried away at the caucus meeting on Wednesday morning and arrive all pumped up for question period. That is human nature, but there must be consequences for certain behaviours. The amount of time for question period is limited: it is from 2:25 to 3:00 p.m. from Monday to Thursday. If in the end we were to decide to give the Speaker the discretion to extend question period until 3:10 or 3:15 p.m., then I will no longer have any problem.