Senator BRANDIS (Queensland—Attorney-General, Vice-President of the Executive Council and Leader of the Government in the Senate) (14:24): No such concerns have been expressed to me, as I said in response to the question I received from the Greens yesterday. The fact is that Mr Dutton, like Mr Morrison before him, is a minister for immigration who has restored control of Australia's borders. And, as you know, Senator Di Natale, public confidence in the government's capacity to control Australian borders is an absolute precondition of successful multiculturalism. The PRESIDENT: Pause the clock. A point of order, Senator Di Natale? Senator Di Natale: Yes, on relevance. Again, it was a very narrow question, and the question was whether senior members of the Australian Federal Police have contacted leaders of the Australian Muslim community with their concerns about Minister Dutton's comments—very straightforward. The PRESIDENT: You did preface that with 'Will the minister correct the record', and I think the minister has indicated that he does not need to correct the record, so he has been relevant in that context. Senator BRANDIS: I am always chary of accepting a precis of documents that you will not quote from in direct speech. But no such complaint, no such concern, has been raised with me by either my department or my agencies. So, far from correcting the record, I absolutely stand by what I told you yesterday. Returning to Mr Dutton, the success of any minister for immigration is judged in a number of ways. It is judged— The PRESIDENT: Pause the clock. Senator Di Natale, a point of order? Senator Di Natale: Yes, a point of order on relevance, again. I am not interested in the success or otherwise of Minister Dutton; I am interested in whether senior members of the Australian Federal Police have contacted members of the Australian Muslim community. It is straightforward. And if the minister does not have that information he can take it on notice. But he made a very clear statement yesterday that that had not occurred. Take it on notice, if he does not have the answer at hand. The PRESIDENT: My recollection of yesterday was that the minister said he had not had concerns expressed to him. You have now asked him whether he is aware of concerns expressed to third parties or to others. The minister has heard the question. The minister has been relevant. He has been in context to the question you have asked. Senator BRANDIS: So, Senator Di Natale, if you care to quote, in direct speech, from a document that you assert refers specifically to Mr Dutton's remarks, please do so. Your failure to do so is revealing. The success of Mr Dutton as a Minister for Immigration and Border Protection is judged according to how successful Australia's immigration policy has been, and it has been immensely successful, and how successful our resettlement programs for refugees have been, and they have been the most successful in the world, and how successful Mr Dutton has been in protecting Australia's borders so that public confidence in the government's capacity to protect the borders is high, and on that he has a perfect score. The PRESIDENT: Senator Di Natale, a supplementary question?