I'll continue:
(xi) officials of the Canadian Security Intelligence Service, by themselves, for two hours;
(xii) Nathalie Drouin, deputy clerk of the Privy Council and national security and intelligence advisor to the Prime Minister, by herself, for one hour;
(xiii) Vincent Rigby, former National Security and Intelligence Advisor to the Prime Minister, by himself, for one hour;
(xiv) David Morrison, former acting national security and intelligence advisor to the Prime Minister, by himself, for one hour;
(xv) Jody Thomas, former national security and intelligence advisor to the Prime Minister;
(xvi) officials of the Federal Bureau of Investigation, by themselves, for one hour;
(xvii) officials of the secretariat of the Inter-Parliamentary Alliance on China, by themselves, for one hour; and
(xviii) academics, IT and cybersecurity experts, and other witnesses requested by the committee, provided that the parties shall file their preliminary lists of witnesses within 10 days of the adoption of this motion;
(d) order the production of all memoranda, briefing notes, emails, records of conversations, and any other relevant documents, including any drafts that are in the possession of any government department or agency, including the Security and Intelligence Threats to Elections task force, the Critical Election Incident Protocol Panel, any minister’s office, the Prime Minister’s Office or the House of Commons administration, containing information concerning cyber-attacks and efforts to conduct cyber-attacks against members of the House of Commons by Advanced Persistent Threat 31 (APT 31) and related entities, provided that
(i) these documents be deposited without redaction with the Law Clerk and Parliamentary Counsel, in both official languages, within one month of the adoption of this order;
(ii) a copy of the documents shall also be deposited with the Law Clerk and Parliamentary Counsel, in both official languages, within one month of the adoption of this order, with any proposed redaction of information which, in the government’s opinion, could reasonably be expected to compromise the identities of employees or sources or intelligence-collecting methods of Canadian or allied intelligence agencies;
(iii) the Law Clerk and Parliamentary Counsel shall promptly notify the committee whether he is satisfied that the documents were produced as ordered, and, if not, the chair shall be instructed to present forthwith, on behalf of the committee, a report to the House outlining the material facts of the situation;
(iv) the Law Clerk and Parliamentary Counsel shall assess the redactions proposed by the government, pursuant to subparagraph (ii), to determine whether he agrees that the proposed redactions conform with the criteria set out in subparagraph (ii); and,
(A) if he agrees, he shall provide the documents, as redacted by the government pursuant to subparagraph (ii), to the clerk of the committee; or,
(B) if he disagrees with some or all of the proposed redactions, he shall provide a copy of the documents, redacted in the manner he determines would conform with the criteria set out in subparagraph (ii), together with a report indicating the number, extent and nature of the government’s proposed redactions with which he disagreed, to the clerk of the committee; and
(v) the clerk of the committee shall cause the documents provided by the Law Clerk and Parliamentary Counsel pursuant to subparagraph (iv) to be distributed to the members of the committee forthwith upon receipt.
That is the motion that I have now put on notice.
With that, I would like to now adjourn debate on the motion on the table.