I don't have anybody else on the speakers' list.
I want to make a comment here. This may provoke further comment, in which case, we'll add to the speakers list. If not, we'll go back in camera.
Just as a general response to the comments made here, the point of raising this at the beginning of the meeting, of course, is so that I don't spring any surprises on people by suddenly announcing that I'm going to vote without having given prior notification of that. So there was no means to respond to your question or your point, Madam Charlton. There was no ability, on my part, to indicate this intention without doing so at the beginning of the meeting.
Your point about being in camera for most meetings is entirely correct. The closest approximation I can think of to this subcommittee was the one dealing with the ethics code, which I chaired. But we can't guarantee that will always be the case. So that's a concern that is partly valid on your part, but I think it's not guaranteed to be the case.
The other subcommittee I chair, the human rights subcommittee, does meet mostly in public, although partly in private. So the possibility exists that we'll be meeting out of camera.
Now I'm turning to Madam Jennings' point, the point with regard to this being, in some respect, an anti-democratic action on my part.
I'll just make the observation that denying somebody a vote is anti-democratic. Allowing them to vote is democratic. There are times when not being democratic is the appropriate thing to do. There are lots of cases where being undemocratic is appropriate. Our courts don't operate as democracies. They don't seek to give the majority's opinion. They seek to rule correctly on the law.
But the decision to deprive one party of a vote was a decision to act undemocratically that I thought was unjustified. I don't need to reprise the arguments I gave in the main committee on this subject. As a matter of accuracy in our semantics, democracy is where people can vote, not where they're deprived of a vote.
This problem could have been resolved by allowing a government member to sit on the subcommittee.
Madam Jennings is on the order. I'll just finish my comments and then I'll give her the floor.
So I presented the subcommittee with an alternative, and I did it up front in order that the option is available to you. You do have the option of removing me as chair, which would then allow you to seek someone else who might be more compliant in the anti-democratic way in which this committee has been structured. It's not my intention to bring things to a vote so they can't be avoided. It's not within my power, obviously, as one member of a four-member committee, to overrule a majority on the committee. But it's also not within my power to indicate dissent from decisions that I don't agree with. I don't necessarily think there will be very many decisions that I would be inclined to disagree with. This is a group of sensible people. Once I've been deprived of the vote, and therefore the party I represent, the government party, is deprived of any voice on this committee, and there is something, I believe, fundamentally wrong with that.
As a note, there are other chairs of four-member subcommittees, so I'm told--I haven't confirmed this--who have in fact, within the life of this Parliament, indicated that they would be voting and who have voted. So this is not without precedent, although it hasn't been done on a subcommittee of this committee.
So those are just some important points, I think.
I see that my comments have prompted some additional desires for commentary.
Madam Jennings is first and Madame DeBellefeuille is second.