Senator GALLAGHER (Australian Capital Territory—Manager of Opposition Business in the Senate) (10:44): Very briefly, in response to the Leader of the Government's outburst on this suspension motion, it was our view—a view that was shared by the government, as we understood it—that this bill should be dealt with this sitting session. We are in the last hours of this— Senator Cormann: You're wasting time. Senator GALLAGHER: Well, if you had taken a look at the speaking list for the Payment Times Reporting Bill 2020, you would see that the bill, including the amendments, would take us up to 11.45, the hard marker. We were giving the government the opportunity to agree that this should be prioritised and dealt with, to make sure we got this done before other matters before the Senate today. That was the idea of Senator Keneally. That was the reason she moved this today. It's pretty straightforward. If the government wants this done and wants it guaranteed to be done, this is a sensible way of timetabling the program. We think there is a risk that it won't be done, because the payment times legislation does have a lot of speakers. There are amendments and it could take us up to the hard marker. That was the reason we did it. It's quite sensible. I don't think it needed that kind of response from the government, frankly, particularly on a bill that they want done. Senator Cormann interjecting— Senator GALLAGHER: We would have had just a few minutes to deal with it, reorder the program and get on with it. Senator Cormann: Why did you not give us notice, then? The ACTING DEPUTY PRESIDENT ( Senator Bilyk ): Minister, interjections are disorderly. The PRESIDENT: The question is that the motion to suspend standing orders moved by Senator Keneally be agreed to.