Mr LAMING (Bowman) (21:27): This is a most serious motion that should have been brought to this place by serious members of this parliament, but in effect what we have is a juvenile attempt—presumably by this Prime Minister—to belittle the issue of smoking and take the most innocent and ill-informed government MPs from Queensland, and a wannabe Queensland MP from the government's side as well, to prosecute this ridiculous debate about donations. Ms KING: Speaker, I rise on a point of order. The member has just impugned another member and I ask you to call him to order, please. The SPEAKER: The member for Bowman should address the motion. If he is going to treat this motion seriously, perhaps he could refer to it. Mr LAMING: What we have here is a juvenile approach to a very serious issue. One in five Aboriginal Australians die of a smoking related illness. These three have presumably been sent down into this great chamber with speaking notes from the Prime Minister's office; you can almost hear the advisers giggling away in the Prime Minister's office, saying, 'Yes, go on, make a political point out of smoking.' What a disgrace! We know how serious this is. There has been bipartisan support about this and all you can make is a juvenile point, direct from your own leader's office. If you were serious about smoking and the 49 per cent of remote Aboriginal Australians who are desperately trying to kick the habit, you would be more worried about what our Indigenous coordinator is doing, you would be more interested in the investment that is going on in small communities right across this nation to kick smoking and you would take the lead from my previous coalition speaker, who gave a dispassionate, well-informed and completely sober analysis of smoking—which we have not had from the government's side. This is one of these 9.25 pm giggles that is not even worthy of being brought into this chamber. There is no mention of the money from alcohol outlets that the other side of the chamber relies on and there is no mention of the gambling money that festoons itself in the ACT through the Workers Club and the Tradesmen's Club which keeps your entire campaign in the ACT afloat. The SPEAKER: I don't think it keeps my campaign afloat. The use of the word 'you' is not appreciated. Mr LAMING: There is the fact that so much more money is taken on the areas of gambling, but of course there is no mention of the great social harm that makes: quite prepared to be holier than thou after a 2004 decision but not willing to pay back any of the money the Labor Party took from smoking companies prior to that; just quite happy to make a cheap political point ever since. This is a serious matter, probably the greatest health challenge facing this nation. We had half an hour in this chamber to address this in a sober way, and that is something that has not happened from this government. Debate interrupted.