Senator McKENZIE (Victoria—Minister for Agriculture and Leader of the Nationals in the Senate) (14:54): Senator Hanson, the department and the Office of Parliamentary Counsel drafted the code on the basis of the consultations undertaken prior to the election—full stop. There were no revisions in my office; there was nothing. So you can rest assured that the consultations with the processors and with the dairy farmers across eight very specific and unique dairy regions in this country all come to bear in the code that is out as an exposure draft now. And I am rapt to see people engaging with this process. I'm speaking to farmers in WA who— The PRESIDENT: Order! Senator Hanson on a point of order? Senator Hanson: A point of order: the minister is not answering the question. I asked: is it the same exposure draft that was drawn up previously— The PRESIDENT: Senator Hanson, there are opportunities for debate. I remind all senators: a point of order is not simply a chance to re-ask a preferred part of the question or to simply re-ask it. It must relate to whether the answer is being directly relevant. I've been listening carefully to the minister and I believe she was being directly relevant to answering about the preparation and release of the code that you asked about. Senator McKenzie. Senator McKENZIE: Sorry, Senator Hanson—I forgot you're actually new to this issue, so you probably don't appreciate the history. So why don't I walk you through pre-election on the dairy code development. As I said, departmental officials visited eight regions. The first round of consultation was in late 2018 and it identified views. Then we went out again— (Time expired) The PRESIDENT: Senator Hanson, a final supplementary question?