Senator CORMANN (Western Australia—Leader of the Government in the Senate, Minister for Finance and Vice-President of the Executive Council) (14:58): No attempt by the Greens at trailing their coat for a future coalition with the Labor Party, where no doubt they will come out and try to harm the economy and jobs again, will distract us from our job, which is to support Australians, protect people's health and protect people's livelihoods through this pandemic and to ensure we put in place a plan for the strongest possible economic and jobs recovery on the other side. That is what we are focused on. The PRESIDENT: Senator McKim on a point of order? Senator McKim: The point of order is on relevance. We're now two-thirds of the way through the minister's provided time to answer this question. The question was very clear. It was about prime ministerial standards and ministerial standards and whether Mr Sukkar would be stood down while the Prime Minister made that assessment. Minister Cormann has gone nowhere near the question. Mr President, I ask that you remind him of the question. The PRESIDENT: Senator McKim, you've reminded the minister of the second part of the question. It did have a preamble. The minister is allowed some discretion in being directly relevant to the preamble as well, but I've let you remind him of the point of the question. Senator CORMANN: It is clearly a partisan, political question in relation to party organisational matters. It is interesting that in the middle of a pandemic a senator for Queensland is interested in internal party matters in the state of Victoria. I'll let the people of Queensland judge that at the next election. No doubt that is why the vote for the Greens is particularly weak in that particular— (Time expired) The PRESIDENT: Senator Waters, a final supplementary question?