Senator McKENZIE (Victoria—Minister for Agriculture and Leader of the Nationals in the Senate) (14:43): Thank you very much for your question, Senator. It's great to hear the Labor Party concerned about ensuring the sustainability of the dairy industry here in Australia—5,200 dairy farmers, who we have stood with from day one. It was our government that set up the ACCC inquiry on the back of the clawbacks that Murray Goulburn and Fonterra instigated. It was us that got the ACCC to do a very detailed inquiry into the industry. It is that inquiry's recommendations to implement a draft mandatory code that we're actually delivering. We took that policy to the federal election, along with $22 million worth of other support for our dairy farmers. We didn't put in a floor price to the people— The PRESIDENT: Senator Wong on a point of order? Senator Wong: I'm conscious of the lengthy ruling you gave us earlier on direct relevance, but whilst there were two preceding paragraphs, the question was, 'When will the code come into effect?' We'd ask the minister to be directly relevant to that. The PRESIDENT: On the point of order, I have allowed, when I have made rulings on direct relevance, for ministers to provide some context, but I remind the minister of the question. There were two questions there, plus the reference, and you've reminded the minister of the second bit, but I remind the minister of that. Senator McKENZIE: I don't need any reminding. We're keen to get that mandatory draft code of conduct that we promised at the election in place as soon as possible. To that end, we have consulted on an exposure draft with the dairy industry over the past four weeks. We are keen on making sure we restore the bargaining power to dairy farmers when they are in contract negotiations with processors. The mandatory code of conduct, everyone in this chamber will be rapt to hear, is on track to be in place by 1 January 2020. Rather than a watered-down code, this code will improve contractual arrangements between dairy farmers and their processors, help rebalance the bargaining power and improve the transparency of transactions. The code was a key recommendation, as I said, of the ACCC report. We had done consultations prior to the federal election; we've consulted on the exposure draft post-election. We are now working with the industry to ensure that this is a code that actually delivers for each of the eight very unique dairy industries. As I've said, what works in WA or Queensland, won't work in Tasmania. (Time expired) The PRESIDENT: Senator Green, a supplementary question?