Senator RUSTON (South Australia—Minister for Families and Social Services and Manager of Government Business in the Senate) (14:15): The legislation that is before us today is particularly technical, so you may not have got all the way through the detail. Quite clearly one of the things we are seeking to do today is to change the eligibility criteria as they apply to the jobseeker payment, and the other payments the coronavirus supplement will be applicable to, such that people are able to get broader access. As I said, we are waiving waiting periods, assets tests and the like so that, after the passage of this legislation and its royal assent, those 88,000 people you are referring to will be eligible for immediate payment; there is no longer a one-week waiting period, so they will be eligible for immediate payment. They will also be immediately eligible for the $750 bonus that was announced in the stimulus package a couple of weeks ago. So— The PRESIDENT: Order. Senator Watt on a point of order. Senator Watt: Again on relevance: the question was about the delay to the coronavirus supplement, not other forms of payments. The PRESIDENT: With respect, Senator Watt: the minister was being directly relevant. I cannot instruct the minister how to answer. If the minister is talking about the supplement you referred to—I heard that she did refer to it, and I was listening carefully—I cannot instruct her how to answer the question. Senator RUSTON: Obviously I'll look to furthering my answer on your next question. The PRESIDENT: Senator Watt, a further supplementary question?