I'm just about to enter my 20th year here, and for what it's worth, there was a time when the rounds used to circulate between the parties. In other words, round, round, round, round. Then there came a time when there were five parties in the House of Commons, and so it was round, round, round, round, over to the government for a round.
The difficulty with that as it evolved was that the government members, if it was all just party rounds and there was a majority government, would be the chopped liver. They would never get a chance to make an intervention. Why bother coming to the committee if you never get a round because the opposition parties chewed up so many rounds, and it's only a two-hour meeting?
The solution to that was to recognize that every member is, give or take a bow tie around here, equal. Therefore--and the only way we could ensure that all members were treated fairly in the rounds for questions was that after the party rounds, it then became a sequence of member rounds, and we alternated, recognizing that the government would have, we believe, roughly half the seats in the House and half the representation on the committee. That ensured everybody would get a round.
In the current iteration, if we alternate the way it says, the government would get slightly more pro rata time than they would be otherwise entitled to based on the seats in the House, because we have a minority government.
We have always relied on the chair. The chair here has been very fair over the last while. I didn't really see anything as broken. The most important thing is that as we alternate back and forth, it's imperative that any member who has not had a round be recognized before a member who has already had a round, whether it's a party round or an individual round. That is so important in keeping all members of the committee committed to the work of the committee and ensuring appropriate attendance.
The wording we have here now does that, and in the draft it's actually quite favourable to the government, for the reason I pointed out. If we alternate back and forth, 50-50, the government is going to get 50% of the rounds when they have less than 50% of the membership. The only thing that makes that fly is that the chair at some point is going to have to refrain from giving a second round to a government member in order to recognize someone in the opposition who may not have spoken yet, and who may not have had a round of questions.
I would like to leave it the way it is. It's reasonably fair that the chair seems to make it operate well. I'm reluctant to get into a situation where the government chair may be leaned on to skew the questioning. I don't think he or she would get away with it for very long, but I think the current situation works well for the government and for the opposition.