Thank you, Mr. Chair.
I find it hard to support Mr. Lake's comments. In fact, the government decided to announce that decision in June, which is when a session normally ends. We know that Canadians are especially divided on this matter, and so people reacted. The matter is of an important and urgent nature. Meanwhile, the government and the department continue to move the issue forward.
I want to reiterate the fact that the government decided to make the announcement in June. You know how many people accepted the invitation to attend the July meeting despite the very short notice. Unfortunately, I was not at the July 27 meeting. Someone volunteered to take my spot, and he did good work. The meeting was held despite the short notice, and right in the middle of the summer holidays. It was not at the beginning or the end of the holidays, it was in the middle, during the most intensive period. You had no difficulty in finding witnesses in such a short time. Why would we now, three to four days before a meeting, have trouble getting witnesses?
I can understand that it would be hard for you to find witnesses who support the government's decision. I understand that, as I have not seen many supporters, aside from the few loyal Conservative activists of the constituency, who are a rare breed. We have the ability to react quickly. At times, when a parliamentary session is in full swing, we may meet on a Tuesday and decide to hold a meeting on Thursday that same week. And we succeed in getting witnesses to appear on two days' notice.
This is a very hot topic, and it is clearly causing controversy. You can obviously get your witnesses to appear if you want to. Regardless of that, we should not lose sight of the key issue, which is that the government is trying to postpone these meetings because they put it in a bad position. I understand that, since the decision under discussion is a bad one.
I think that while we are debating this and the government is trying to postpone this meeting, officials are going on with their work, under the direction of the government. They have perhaps even gotten to the stage of printing the documents. The only compromise I would agree to is to postpone the meeting in return for the government's commitment to postpone or stop the printing of the documents.
The government is saying that our actions are political. So they are, but in the truest sense of the word. Canadians have spoken against the government's decision, and we feel that we must represent their position because time is running out. The government would be quite happy to take up the debate as of September 20. However, how far will the government have gotten by that time? Will the documents already have been printed?
The situation is urgent, and you can get witnesses to appear on Friday, from 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. I think that we have no choice, this is what we need to do. It is unfortunate for those who can't be there, but that's politics. When there are emergencies, we have to meet; when we can't make the meeting, someone else takes our place. It's that simple.