No. I will address this, Chair.
At the beginning of the meeting Monsieur Godin tabled a motion, and we've allowed discussion on who should come in front of this committee pertaining to the work we're doing. No one cut me off when I was talking about the Canada Public Service Agency. I didn't see arms going up and people saying, “Oh that's irrelevant. Cut him off, get him back on track.” We discussed bringing in other witnesses. I haven't heard push-back on that.
We are trying to finalize our work on official languages as the official languages committee. As part of the discussion on the motion, and in keeping with what we've been discussing all morning, I'm proposing a potential witness, and all of a sudden they're upset about this one. Why didn't they cut me off about the Canada Public Service Agency when I brought that up?
In accordance with the way the debate has been managed this morning, I'm raising a valid point that the Liberal members here advocate for official languages. They say they respect the choice of unilingual anglophones and unilingual francophones to be served in their own languages, and we're not to pressure them to pursue bilingualism, for example.
But we have a star candidate. He's not an unknown; he's a candidat vedette. There's even talk of his running for the leadership at some future point. He made headlines across Canada with his comments insulting unilingual anglophones and unilingual francophones across Canada. The Bloc should be interested in this because they—