Mr. Speaker, with great respect for the comments the hon. member has made, there is a procedure for dealing with this matter. With the greatest respect, I think the hon. member ought to follow that accepted procedure.
The same point was raised in the House yesterday. Your Honour very properly ruled that there was not a question of privilege before the House because no report had been received from the committee.
I think the hon. member is confused, again with great respect to him, because I know he is trying to raise a very serious concern. He misunderstood the import of Your Honour's ruling yesterday, which was that this cannot be brought before the House until there is a report from the committee. By that statement I think he is inferring that there must be a report on the incident from the committee or else he cannot raise the matter.
I suggest that is not what Your Honour ruled or intended and it is not in accordance with the practice of the House. I refer the hon. member and Your Honour to citation 894 of Beauchesne's 6th edition. I will read paragraphs (1) and (3) under the citation:
(1) Until the report and the Minutes of Proceedings and Evidence have been laid upon the Table, it is irregular to refer to them in debate, or to put questions in reference to the proceedings of the committee.
Then I will skip to (3).
If alleged irregular proceedings take place in committee but are not referred to in the report that the committee presented to the House, then it is not competent for the House to go beyond that report to debate this matter.
The hon. member can clearly raise it in the House at the time the report comes. Whether it will be debated, he can raise it and ask Your Honour to rule. Certainly, there will be some indication in a report if there was a vote taken that something happened. There will be minutes of the proceedings of the committee indicating there was an appeal from the ruling of the chairman. That will be reported in the minutes of the committee and that will come to the House.
All those things will be reported in there. The hon. member will be able to debate those and comment on them in the House and raise his question of privilege, if indeed there is a question of privilege here, when that report has come to the House. Then Your Honour will be seized of the matter, we will have the report before the House and will be able to make some comment.
The difficulty and the reason that Speakers have taken the view that the proceedings in committees are not within the purview of the Chair is that until a committee has reported, the committee is master of its own proceedings. It may change what it has done and correct any errors. That is part of the reason for the rule. Committees can undo what they have done in certain circumstances and redo what they have done and thereby make them correct if there has been some error.
I suggest it is incumbent upon the hon. member and his colleagues on the committee in question to go back to the chairman of the committee, raise the issues before the chair and seek to have the matter rectified in the committee. I think the hon. member knows that there have been efforts made to see that this happens.
I suggest to him that the proper course to follow under the circumstances is to raise the matter with the chairman of the committee at another meeting of the committee instead of boycotting the meetings of the committee and make an effort to resolve the matter. I suggest if that is done it would be unnecessary for him to come to the House with a question of privilege. He would probably find that perhaps not all, but the majority of his concerns would be fully dealt with. He would realize the wisdom of the actions of the chair at one point or another in the proceedings and we could get the matter resolved there, which with all due respect, is where it should be resolved.
I do not want to suggest that this sort of thing has not happened before. I was in opposition before. I know how committees work. Sometimes things can happen in committees that hon. members feel strongly about and they wish had not happened. That happens on both sides of the House.
I assure the hon. member that I know in this case the chairman of the committee is eminently reasonable. If the hon. member will meet with the chairman in an effort to resolve the matter, I think there can be a satisfactory resolution so far as we can arrange it before the matter comes back to the House in the report. At that time if the member wishes to debate the proceedings of the committee, he is free to do so pursuant to the standing orders.