Mr. Speaker, it is good to have an audience at last. I am always torn between having absolutely no Liberals in the House and having so many Liberals in the House making so much noise that I cannot hear myself think. We are always betwixt and between whether we want to have one or two government members to hear our remarks or whether we would rather have a whole bunch and be unable to be heard.
Before I begin my remarks on Bill C-70, the harmonized sales tax legislation, I have a few brief remarks on what transpired in this place this morning. There seems to be a misconception on the part of some government members as to exactly what happened. It is important for the viewing audience out there in TV land to understand the process and the procedure which took place this morning and why that got out of kilter. It is necessary to correct the record.
This morning during debate on Bill C-71, the tobacco bill, my colleague from Macleod put forward a motion that the question be now put. What happened was that I believe there was a misunderstanding on the part of the Speaker who was in the Chair at the time. She elected to call the question immediately, but that was not the point at all.