Mr ALBANESE (Grayndler—Leader of the House and Minister for Infrastructure and Transport) (15:25): Madam Deputy Speaker, I wish to raise the issue of committee reports. It is now the case that the report from the member for Banks is— Mr Pyne: On what basis is this being raised? Mr ALBANESE: I am seeking indulgence. Mr Pyne: You can't just seek indulgence to slag the opposition. Mr ALBANESE: You're not in the chair! The DEPUTY SPEAKER ( Ms AE Burke ): The Manager of Opposition Business will resume his seat. The Leader of the House, on indulgence, is seeking advice. I will allow it, and then the Manager of Opposition Business can debate the issue when I have actually heard what the Leader of the House is about to say. Mr Pyne: Madam Deputy Speaker, I raise a point of order, under standing order 98. The DEPUTY SPEAKER: I know it is about procedure. Mr Pyne: I am waiting. The DEPUTY SPEAKER: The Manager of Opposition Business will resume his seat. Mr Pyne: I am asking for a point of order under standing order 98. The DEPUTY SPEAKER: The Manager of Opposition Business will resume his seat. I need to hear from the Leader of the House as to what he is seeking before I can progress. Mr ALBANESE: I think that the House might want to— Mr Pyne: 86. Mr Combet: He got the wrong standing order! The DEPUTY SPEAKER: Order! The Leader of the House has the call. The minister is not assisting. Mr ALBANESE: It is a serious point. If a report that is to be tabled in both houses—the House of Representatives and the Senate—is not tabled here in the House but is just tabled in the Senate, we are giving up our position as the prime house of the parliament. I would have thought the Manager of Opposition Business would support that. It is on the blue that this report was coming. I ask the Manager of Opposition Business to have a little bit of common sense and allow the report to be tabled.