I am really pleased that Mr. Komarnicki has raised this issue, for the second time by the way. It is quite appropriate, Madam Chair, for the following reason. I know why he did so. Last time, I used most of my time to put a question to the witnesses, and I did that deliberately. I do not usually do that but I will explain why I did so then. I believe we will have to come to another agreement. Sometimes, when we put a question to a minister or someone else, that person takes a lot of time to answer just to waste our time. Even though the question may have been quite direct, we are then forced to ask supplementaries. Sometimes, we also have to add comments in order to explain the context.
If the parliamentary secretary agrees, we could establish clear rules about this. I believe we all work hard to prepare our questions in order to get clear answers from the witnesses, but we rarely do. If we are in agreement on this, I can assure you that my questions will be short, and there will be many of them if the answers are short also. I understand that answers sometimes have to be more detailed, and that is understandable. But, sometimes, we are only looking for yes or no.