Mr. Speaker, I apologize. There are six. I will not do that again.
We are talking about the relevance of members of parliament. We on this side expect to attend committees, we expect work to get done, we expect a report to be produced or legislation to be returned to the House, and we expect something to be done with it.
It is no different than issues like petitions. Most people in this country understand that when a petition comes into the House of Commons virtually nothing is done with it. We have time and time again gone across the way and said “Listen, 100,000 people the other day signed a petition”, but all they get back is one letter. There is no action. We have to make changes.
The committee process is the same. We tried to make changes. We tried, for instance, to get television coverage of committees. That was one example and it could have been done at the committee on sport in Canada, but it was not.
This is what we want. It includes this particular report I am talking about. We want, as does the media, equal access to committees; not to show members' faces, but there is more work done in committees than all of the work done in the House of Commons in a week.