Senator BRANDIS (Queensland—Attorney-General, Vice-President of the Executive Council and Leader of the Government in the Senate) (14:28): If there is an application to the Northern Australia Infrastructure Facility, as I understand there is, then it will be considered by the Northern Australia Infrastructure Facility, or the board of governors of that entity, in due course. By the way, on the question of the issue of public investment in the funding of major infrastructure, it has been pointed out to me by one of my colleagues that the Rudd government invested $1.2 billion of public money in Hunter local rail through the Australian Rail Track Corporation. The PRESIDENT: Order! Senator Bartlett on a point of order. Senator Bartlett: My point of order is on relevance. The minister seems to be one question behind each time. My question went directly to the issue of receiving foreign donations from the Adani corporation. The PRESIDENT: Senator Brandis. Senator BRANDIS: Senator Bartlett, as you rightly point out, this government is committed to banning foreign donations. My colleague Senator Cormann, the Special Minister of State, will be introducing legislation into the parliament in the near future to do that very thing. And we look forward to the Australian Greens—themselves no mean receivers, by the way, of foreign donations—and the Australian Labor Party supporting that.