Just for folks who might be watching, what we're talking about here, Mr. Chair, is that when you have three ministers come, and especially given the scope of the ministers' responsibilities—you have the Minister of Immigration responsible for processing and coming up with policies on how many people are coming into the country and under what circumstances; the Minister of Public Safety, who would be looking at the security of Canada's borders and screening; as well as the Minister of Employment, who deals essentially with all of the social programs in government—to allocate in one-hour block approximately seven minutes for the opposition to ask questions of all three of those ministers in one meeting would be wholly inadequate. I firmly believe that the optics on this would be that there was an effort by the government to not allow transparency on this issue, which is wrong.
I also believe that the comment my colleague opposite just made, “Don't worry, the ministers will follow up with you”, is particularly unbelievable given the debacle that happened with the immigration minister in Winnipeg on Friday. I don't think anyone believes they would just follow up with us after we've almost had to move motions on parliamentary privilege to get dribs and drabs of information out of the departments, often months later. Thanks but no thanks on that line of questioning.
Mr. Chair, I know that your intent will be to schedule this as efficiently as possible. Again, just for people who are watching, if the government votes against this motion, what it would essentially say is that it would prefer to have three ministers give protracted statements, advertising government talking points, so that opposition members can't ask questions of them. Thank you.