Senator ABETZ (Tasmania—Leader of the Government in the Senate, Minister Assisting the Prime Minister for the Public Service and Minister for Employment) (14:30): When you start having a Labor Party senator pretending to know what the great tradition of liberalism is, you know that they are really desperate to try to get into the policy space— The PRESIDENT: Pause the clock! Senator Wong, on a point of order? Senator Wong: Mr President, I raise a point of order. I am not sure if the senator misheard the question. It is a quote from Mr Turnbull. It is not Senator Ketter. The PRESIDENT: There is no point of order. The minister was just commencing his answer. Senator ABETZ: The Labor Party's approach to this would see the Australian GDP reduced considerably. It would mug the economy by $633 billion and real wages growth would be around six per cent lower. Australian income— The PRESIDENT: Pause the clock! Senator Moore, on a point of order? Senator Moore: Mr President, I raise a point of order on direct relevance to the quote provided to the minister in the question. He has not come close to responding to that quote. The PRESIDENT: I remind the minister that he has 27 seconds in which to answer the question. Senator ABETZ: The Australian Labor Party has a policy that they, of course, do not want expounded in this chamber, because they do not want the Australian people to hear what the consequences of Labor Party policy are. Mr Turnbull fully supports the approach of the government which he now leads, a government that will be taking a plan to Paris— Senator Conroy: In 25 seconds, could he have— The PRESIDENT: Pause the clock. Senator Conroy, your colleague is on her feet. Senator Moore, on a point of order? Senator Moore: Mr President, I raise a point of order. Again, in the remaining four seconds, as my colleague has said, we have not come near to that quote. Could you please, again, draw the attention of the minister to the quote? The PRESIDENT: I remind the minister that he has four seconds in which to answer the question. Senator ABETZ: That the Prime Minister actually supports the government's policy. (Time expired)