Thank you, Mr. Chair.
Thank you very much for being here, Mr. Fergus.
I've been listening to you since the beginning of the meeting. You have made many comments about debate, about members' intentions behind their comments, about decorum and about how you view that decorum.
You are at the very heart of another question of privilege concerning your partisanship and your partisan actions in the House of Commons and outside of it. Your actions have made it clear that you have a fairly elastic idea of what partisanship is.
Unfortunately, as you know, you have lost the confidence of the official opposition and the second opposition party to arbitrate the debates. In that sense, you do not have the credibility, in my opinion, to comment on the quality and intentions of members of the House. You yourself have become an issue in the House, which should never be the case for the Speaker.
Why, after all these blunders, do you not accept the verdict of half the members of the House who are asking you to resign?