Yes. I think that is so important because we've seen this time and again with the PMO.
I'm not going to say it.
Again, I say this with all due respect to my colleagues across the floor, because I don't believe, Mr. Chair, that all of the members of their caucus believe 100% in where we're going. I think that there are some very wise people on the other side.
Indeed, over the course of the last three weeks, we've had the backbench actually standing up and voting their conscience, probably against the wishes of the front bench. I think the more we see that we have that ability, perhaps Canadians won't want electoral reform. You don't need it.
That's not to say that there isn't a time and a place for ensuring that we vote as one. Moving forward in different areas in terms of sending messages to Canadians, I think they need to see us working together.
Going back to my comment about common ground, it is so important that we find a way. Whether it's sidebar conversations.... We always used to talk about this on one of the work sites. It's called the urinal conversation, the bathroom conversation. You meet somebody in the bathroom, or in the hallway for a hallway conversation, and you find a way to ask, “What are you thinking about this? Is there a way that we can...?” Sometimes the best ways of getting deals done aren't at a desk or sitting across the way from one another.
I'm not saying that the best deals are sometimes made at a urinal, or in a bathroom for that matter. I'm saying that sometimes the best way of finding common ground isn't in an official setting. It is in an informal setting where you can be truthful and speak your mind without worrying that somebody is going to tape you or use the words that you're saying against you.
I think we've gotten away from that. I don't know why or where. I'll bring you back to where, for me, it kind of went sideways, which was last year on May 17. That probably was one of the the things I was most disappointed in.
I think that we can be better. When we talk about this discussion paper and the discussion that we're having back and forth, it truly is about being better and how we do it, but ramming somebody's ideas down....
This isn't my idea. It's not Ms. Vecchio's or Ms. Duncan's or Mr. Schmale's or Mr. Reid's. These aren't Mr. Reid's ideas. This is somebody telling us that they know better; they know the way. I'm not even going to say that this is Ms. Chagger's. I don't believe that she actually wrote this, if I'm not on record already as saying that. I think this came from somebody else.
Mr. Chair, I think that there are things we should be doing, having that conversation about how to make things better.
I believe the take-note debate on procedures was last fall. I stood in the House and provided some ideas as somebody who had only been in the House at that time for less than 14 months. I think I started it off by saying that I am not a procedural nerd.
I can't say that I've read this cover to cover. As a matter of fact, I was worried when I came here tonight that there would be a test on this.