Thank you, Mr. Chair.
The previous routine motion that we had here in committee is unfair to the Liberal members of committee and unfair to the Conservative members of committee, because the previous routine motion, as I understand it, has the first two rounds according each of the parties equal time. That's not fair, because between the two parties we clearly have eight of the 11 members on this committee.
I think there should be a little more proportionality about this, so I would be prepared to modify this previous routine motion so that the Liberal members and the Conservative members have a fair amount of time on this committee.
As it presently stands, in the first two rounds we get a quarter of the questions and the Liberal members get a quarter of the questions. That certainly doesn't reflect our membership on the committee: we have four out of the 11 members on this committee, and the Liberals have four out of 11 members. That's almost 40%. I think it's reasonable for us to have 35% or 40% of the questions in the first two rounds, so I would propose that we come up with an amendment or a change to the previous routine motions so that there's some more proportionality in it.
Otherwise you get into the situation in which the New Democrat member on this committee, Mr. Chair, has a quarter of the questions in the first two rounds. The NDP doesn't have a quarter of the seats in the House; they certainly don't have a quarter of the members on this committee. My constituents and the constituents of other members on this committee have every right to be represented, have every right to question witnesses, have every right to make interventions. I don't think it's fair that a party with only 10% of the seats in the House would be accorded 25% of the questioning time, so I think it's in the interests of the Liberal members of the committee, as it is of the Conservatives, not to go with the previous routine motion.
The previous routine motion had a first round of seven minutes. It went Liberal, Bloc, New Democrats, Conservatives. The second round was of five minutes: Liberal, Bloc, New Democrat, Conservatives. How is that fair for members of either the Conservative Party on this committee or the Liberal Party?
I think we should change it to better reflect the proportionality of the representation we have in this committee, and that's what Mr. Lake's proposal was to do. If you don't like that proposal—speaking through you, Mr. Chair, to the Liberal members of the committee—why don't we come up with an alternative?
You're short-changing yourselves, with 25% of the questions in the first two rounds; we're getting short-changed as well. In other words, eight out of the 11 members are getting half the questions in the first two rounds. That's not fair. I think we should work together to come up with a first and second round that are a little more proportional to our representation.
I'm willing to forgo some of that to ensure that the New Democrats have an ability to ask questions in the first two rounds, as members of the Bloc have, but the previous routine motion that the committee operated under is not fair, and it's frankly not reflective of the rules under which parliamentary committees should operate. There's a concept here that we have our members on this committee in proportion to our representation in the House; therefore, we should also have some proportionality about the number of questions we get to ask witnesses.
Hopefully we can come to a quick agreement on this, so that we don't have a protracted discussion.
Maybe, as was suggested to me, Mr. Chair, we could suspend for five minutes to work something out and then continue in five minutes.