Excuse me. I think I have the floor.
Obviously, based on what he said, they have conspired in advance to do this. If I'm to take Mr. Doherty at his word when he says that everything was done in good faith and so on and so forth, well, if it was really done in good faith, why wouldn't you have given it to us in advance of the meeting as well, as you clearly did, based on your comments? I don't think we're asking for too much.
For Mr. Doherty to somehow compare this to the three motions we did in routine proceedings is absolutely ludicrous. We're talking about whether or not we're going to change the amount of time somebody gets to speak versus an entire motion that has all these different parts to it that we're somehow supposed to be able to absorb and understand just based on one reading. I mean, at the end of the day, what it will come down to is whether or not the Conservatives genuinely want to work on this committee with the government or whether this is just an opportunity to try to dig up some dirt. I know they are looking for this silver bullet that they seem to think exists deep within all these documents that they're trying to pull. A number of Conservatives have been on a government side before. No member of this committee, certainly, knows if that silver bullet they're looking for exists, but we do know that the best way to get information is to be as collaborative as possible with all members on the committee.
My sense is that the best thing to do, moving forward, is for us to allow this discussion to happen off-line. I want to discuss this motion with my caucus, just like the Conservatives had the opportunity to discuss it with themselves, and possibly the NDP and the Bloc. Based on Mr. Doherty's comments, maybe they had the opportunity to do so, and I would like to discuss this with my colleagues as well.
For me, this is not about not being able to vote on this. One way or the other, we can vote on this. My only problem is with voting on it right now, because I feel that I and other Liberal colleagues have been completely slighted by the manner in which this was sprung on us. You're asking me to vote on something that I don't fully understand. You talk about what's in the best interest of Canadians. Well, I'm certainly not representing Canadians that well when I am being asked to vote on something that I haven't had the opportunity to really even understand or to thoroughly discuss with my colleagues before we do that. This is notwithstanding the fact that we're now learning that, from what the chair was saying, she doesn't even know if this motion's in order.
Nevertheless, there's still a desire to vote immediately on this, and I just don't think it's something we need to do right now. We can do it at the next meeting that comes up. Whenever we have our next meeting, we can pick it up from there. If you're going to make me take a position on this, at least give me the opportunity to thoroughly read it and understand it and have a discussion with my colleagues on it.
Madam Chair, I would really like to take Ms. Vecchio up on her offer. Could she read this motion to us again, very slowly this time, so that we can really absorb every word of it to the best of our ability?