I just want to clarify, Madam Chair, based on one of the other comments made, that we're not talking about an amendment to the Constitution here. This interpretation of quorum is consistent with the given testimony from, by my count, five reputable sources of expertise on parliamentary procedure and the Constitution. I have a whole bunch of quotes here. I don't want to go through them all, but I really do think that this interpretation in fact is something that we're already employing. In this meeting of this standing committee, we're already operating virtually and counting virtual presence as quorum. We're voting on motions. We're doing all kinds of work in committee business. In a sense, then, it's already implied in the way we're proceeding currently.
Again, I don't think this is a big stretch. It does not require an amendment to the Constitution. Mr. Dufresne was very clear about that. Mr. Greg Tardi was very clear about that. All of them said that the courts would not intervene, and that in fact even if the courts ever did intervene, they would tend to side, in the vast majority of cases, with the living tree approach, where they would likely interpret the specific wording around quorum to include “virtual presence”.
I think this is merely a recommendation that echoes the comments given in testimony. It's not a stretch. Australia, as an example, was the least progressive example in our briefing notes. There are many, many other examples of where parliaments, I think around the world, are operating this way.