Senator CORMANN (Western Australia—Minister for Finance, Vice-President of the Executive Council and Leader of the Government in the Senate) (14:04): The only thing that this government will ignore is the floundering socialist economic agenda of the Labor Party which was so soundly rejected by the Australian people. We will continue to implement our plan for a stronger economy and for more jobs, with lower taxes—pro business, pro growth, pro opportunity, pro aspiration. As we know— The PRESIDENT: Senator Gallacher? Senator Gallacher: Mr President, I've listened carefully to your instructions about points of order, and I take you to standing order 72(3)(c). All it says there for our guidance is: Answers shall be directly relevant to each question. I hardly see how our conduct, as alleged by Senator Cormann, is directly relevant to the question I asked. The PRESIDENT: On the point of order—I may have prepared for this!—you are correct that ministers must be directly relevant. Using one word of a question does not make an answer to a question relevant to a question. However, it was a very open-ended question, Senator Gallacher, and, in that sense, the minister is being directly relevant to it. Senator CORMANN: As I said yesterday, the Australian economy continues to grow, unlike many other economies around the world. More jobs are being created. A record number of Australians are in work. Wages growth in the 2018-19 financial year was the strongest it has been—2.3 per cent, above inflation at 1.6 per cent—since 2013-14, Labor's last budget year. Labor's socialist agenda is not only floundering with the Australian people; it's even floundering with the member for Port Adelaide, hardly a free-market, capitalist advocate. The PRESIDENT: Order! Senator Gallacher— Senator Gallacher: On a point of order: Senator Cormann is misleading the house— The PRESIDENT: I'm afraid time for the answer has expired. So one can't— Senator Gallacher: There is no seat of Port Adelaide anymore.