Thank you, Mr. Speaker. As we all know, questions are to illuminate information, probe concerns, and chase down individual details, and there's a reasonable expectation that certain information cannot be at the tip of the Ministers' fingers. So, Mr. Speaker, I just want to clarify one more time on the record, is there any type of informal impression that the government will take if a Member -- not informal -- or actually now I'm trying to qualify this in a way -- is there any sort of backlash or negative response or attitude from the government if a Member chooses not to proceed that -- because sometimes questions come on the fly, and initiatives need to be raised in the context they're presented, so I just want to make sure Members are not prejudiced in some form. If the Premier could clarify that in some way. Thank you.
Robert Hawkins on Question 225-20(1): Cabinet Process and Policy for Responses to Oral Questions
In the Legislative Assembly on May 30th, 2024. See this statement in context.
Question 225-20(1): Cabinet Process and Policy for Responses to Oral Questions
Oral Questions
May 30th, 2024
Page 615
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