Chair, then it speaks, obviously, to the larger issue of procedure itself. What we have found, Chair, in discussion this afternoon, is that some members want to honour procedure, some seem to want to bypass it when it's convenient for them. I would suggest that's no way to operate in a Parliament either, Chair.
I would strongly encourage all members to understand the reasons for Standing Orders, number one, and procedures and practices, number two, and why they were put into place. There have been over time, I'm sure, many changes, some minor, perhaps some major, for Standing Orders. I note with interest that my colleague Ms. Davies had brought forward a motion for discussion, which we have not yet dealt with at this committee, that would, I think, significantly change the Standing Orders, inasmuch as her motion was, with respect to the appointment of chairs or the election of chairs, to bypass a long-standing practice.
Regarding the approval to have a government member represent committee members as the chair, her suggestion was that we bypass that practice and we allow an opposition member--in other words, change the Standing Orders to allow an opposition member to become chair. Frankly, Chair, I think that is a very substantive change to the Standing Orders that all of us have followed for probably close to a hundred years.
Although I know we haven't had debate on that motion yet, Chair, I would suggest to you that it be something we give very careful consideration to, because I think that then we start going down the path that Mr. Hill referred to--that combined, opposition members can in effect hijack Parliament. Regardless of Canadians' intent to vote governments, whether they be a majority or a minority, if in a minority situation the combined opposition wishes to change Standing Orders, traditions, conventions, procedures and practices, they would have the ability to do so. I am absolutely 100% convinced that was not the intention of our wise forefathers, who spent so much time in developing the Standing Orders to begin with.