The chair has given me the latitude to explain my point of order before making it.
The motion says:
That, in relation to its study on the National Monument to Canada’s Mission in Afghanistan, the Standing Committee on Veterans Affairs
a) call the Deputy Commander of Military Personnel, Lieutenant-General Lise Bourgon; and
b) order the production of all memoranda, briefing notes, e-mails, correspondence or any other records of conversations or communications (including text messages, Microsoft Teams messages, WhatsApp messages, Signal messages or other electronic messaging), with regard to the National Monument to Canada's Mission in Afghanistan, transmitted, since November 8th, 2021, between
(i) the Department of Veterans Affairs and the Office of the Minister of Veterans Affairs,
(ii) the Department of Canadian Heritage and the Office of the Minister of Canadian Heritage,
(iii) the Department of Veterans Affairs and the Privy Council Office,
(iv) the Department of Canadian Heritage and the Privy Council Office,
(v) the Privy Council Office and the Office of the Prime Minister,
(vi) the Office of the Minister of Veterans Affairs and the Office of the Prime Minister, and
(vii) the Office of the Minister of Canadian Heritage and the Office of the Prime Minister, provided that these documents shall be provided to the Clerk of the Committee, in both official languages and without redaction, within 21 days of the adoption of this motion.
If this sounds familiar, you'll note that it's all contained within the motion we just heard, which, I will point out, has been brought forward several times and could have been voted on two months ago had the NDP member voted for the motion and not adjourned the meeting.
Since then, on February 12, the Bloc moved an amendment asking that the motion be amended by adding the following after paragraph (b): “c) And that the Department of Veterans Affairs Canada and the Department of Canadian Heritage provide the official report—”