Thank you, Chair.
To the point of order, it's not a point of order; it's an opportunity to make an interjection merely to suggest that the time allocation motion continue with a slight modification. As to his suggestion, I guess the point of order really was that we've had two and a half meetings this morning.
We haven't had two and a half meetings this morning. We came here to do a clause-by-clause study of this bill, and the clause-by-clause study of the bill was shut down by the government. They said “No, we're not prepared to do a clause-by-clause study of this bill today unless these limitations are placed on it. This committee is not going to consider clause-by-clause unless it's under our terms.” This committee can't consider clause-by-clause of this bill. It can't study it properly. It can only study it in one day, under conditions of time allocation per clause, whether it's five minutes or ten minutes. That's what the motion was.
That's why we've had no clause-by-clause study today. We haven't had two meetings. We had one meeting that started at 8:45, and at a quarter to ten there was a motion to continue, to not adjourn. That can go on forever, I suppose. There's no magic about 11:59. If this committee is not going to adjourn at one o'clock or two o'clock or twelve o'clock, 11:59 means nothing. There's nothing that says this committee meeting is even over at 11:59 tonight, unless we agree with this motion, or this motion passes somehow or other.
We're having one meeting, and the meeting so far is based on the fact that this government doesn't want to have clause-by-clause study of this legislation unless they're in charge, unless it's all done today.
I know there is going to be some spin put on this by the government. I fully expect that: “The opposition won't let this clause-by-clause study proceed.” Wrong. The opposition wants to have clause-by-clause study. We came here this morning to engage in clause-by-clause study. Instead we were faced with a motion, right off the top, that says clause-by-clause study must finish by 11:30 tonight, and that's the only condition under which it's going to start.
So we can't start clause-by-clause. In fact, when we start talking about clauses the chair rules us out of order. Right, Mr. Chair?
He's nodding his head, and that's what he's been doing. When I start talking about a clause and a problem with a particular clause and why it can't be discussed in a time-allocated period of five minutes...or the suggestion now is they might want to change that to ten minutes. That doesn't stop the fact that we came here this morning to do a clause-by-clause study of a bill, which the government is not prepared to engage in unless we accept their bullying tactics.
That's what we got here today. There will only be clause-by-clause consideration of this legislation if it only happens today and never again and if this bill goes back to the House tomorrow. There are nine separate pieces of legislation, some of which have never received the kind of attention that this committee should be giving them. That's what's happening here today. We haven't had two and a half meetings. We've been here since 8:45, I'll grant you that. The reason we are still here now is because the government is refusing to proceed with clause-by-clause study of the bill. They're refusing to do it.
We came here at 8:45. I was ready to listen to the next amendment. Mr. Cotler had a proposal on clause 8. He didn't get to make it. Why? Because before anybody got a chance, one of the government members, Mr. Goguen, put forth a motion saying we must have clause-by-clause study completed by 11:59 tonight—if it's not, it's going to be finished anyway—and imposing on all of our lives, and not only that, imposing on the people of Canada a limitation of consideration in hearing what people have to say about this legislation, in hearing what the officials who are here from the Department of Justice have to say about this in terms of the questions we have to ask, in terms of the motions we're proposing, in terms of amendments in dealing with what the Quebec government has quite rightly put forward as significant concerns.
There are amendments in my name to give effect to the suggestions of the Government of Quebec. They wrote us a letter after the committee meeting on Tuesday. This is not a rush job. What are we dealing with here? We're dealing with serious national issues that have significant consequences for the future of criminal law in Canada and for the costs in the hundreds of millions, perhaps billions, of dollars that are going to be imposed on the provinces and territories. These consequences have to be discussed.
We've heard from people. Yes, we've heard witnesses and there's a public debate. But there's a public debate that this government wants to shut down. They're saying we should move on. They've got the control. They've got the power. They want to move on to something else because this debate is not doing them any good. They don't like being criticized by other governments for not doing a proper job of consultation. They know the Attorney General from Quebec—