Thank you, Mr. Chair.
I think we all agree that there is still work to be done on this. I think there are a lot of conversations yet to be had. There are a lot of people to hear from.
What I am struggling with is how we say, on the one hand, that we want 50 meetings or we need 20 meetings to be able to hear everybody properly, but now we can condense that into eight. Somehow, that's the magic number that's going to satisfy everybody.
As Mr. Motz noted, we supported Madame Michaud's original proposal of two meetings because, perhaps—I think we've heard this before—there should have been a different process for consultation undertaken previously, but the work of the committee is to consider the bill. We have agreed to suspend to discuss—all of us—the amendment we have before us.
I'm trying to figure out how we limit very specifically the conversations that we have in respect of the specific amendment before us. If we take this approach that we want eight meetings on this particular amendment, what's to say that at the next amendment they say that they're not comfortable? Some parties may come out and say that they actually don't like the whole bill. Instead of coming out and saying that they don't like the whole bill and they want to vote it down, they're going to—I will get to my point, Mr. Chair—get to a place where it becomes 106(4) on amendment upon amendment.
I appreciate what Mr. MacGregor has said. I appreciate sincerely that there is a need for further consultation. I'm not clear on whether we achieve that objective by taking one trip to one part of this country. Then we'll hear accusations from folks saying we ignored this part or that part and we still rushed through it.