The first point is that the allocation of speaking time is a separate issue from the mode through which parliamentarians engage in parliamentary debate.
My inclination would be to put the question of how speaking time is allocated as a separate problem from hybridity. Assuming you can resolve that issue of how speaking time gets allocated, then if you have the option of hybridity on the table, which provides more opportunities for a wider range of folks to consider running for public office and then serving in public office—