Mr. Speaker, we could call quorum, but we do not want to.
If the minister, who has now come in, is all ears, I am going to repeat a couple of things for his information.
There are members of the House, including backbench members on that side, who are very concerned about the output and the genuine integrity of committees in terms of whether or not action will be taken when a report is developed in committee. These things are getting buried in the House of Commons.
We do not understand whether it is the cabinet saying “Nice report, but it is not in our interests, so go away”, or whether it is “That is busy work in a committee. You keep busy there, but do not produce anything. Just stay there and we will ignore it”. That is the concern. That is what this is all about.
I know that I have to get to sport. I am on sport, Mr. Speaker. I am telling the government that this report means zero in the House of Commons. It is going nowhere. I am trying to get through to members over there that this cannot continue to occur.
I will give one example. There was a report developed on televised committees on which all parties were in agreement. It came into the House of Commons—