Senator ABETZ (Tasmania—Leader of the Government in the Senate, Minister Assisting the Prime Minister for the Public Service and Minister for Employment) (14:14): Here we go again, a third attempt at relying on gossip columns to ask questions. Can I say yet again: what is the source? 'An unnamed source.' It always is with the Labor Party. When they want to deal with the issues of gossip, we on this side want to deal with the issues of repairing the economy, reducing the cost of living and getting on with the job of creating jobs for our fellow Australians. That is what we are focused on. That is what we dedicate ourselves to. And the budget tomorrow night will indicate that we have been concentrating on job creation rather than tittle-tattle creation. The PRESIDENT: Pause the clock. Senator Moore, a point of order? Senator Moore: Mr President, again it is on direct relevance. I look back with pleasure on the minister's first answer, which was a straight response to the question. I ask you to draw his attention to the question. The PRESIDENT: Thank you, Senator Moore. The minister has 15 seconds in which to complete his answer. Senator ABETZ: When a senator is unable to name the source and just relies on some sort of gossip column— Senator Kim Carr: He did name the source. Senator ABETZ: The source is 'unnamed'; that is pretty accurate, isn't it! That is typical of Labor policy formulation. The PRESIDENT: Pause the clock. A point of order, Senator Carr? Senator Kim Carr: On a point of order, on relevance: the question was about a cabinet colleague quoted in the Sunday Telegraph yesterday. The source was clearly named. The PRESIDENT: That is not a point of order; that is a debating point. Minister, have you concluded your answer? You have two seconds. Senator ABETZ: Simply to repeat: 'unnamed, unsourced'.