Senator PAYNE (New South Wales—Minister for Foreign Affairs and Minister for Women) (14:16): There are two things about that. The first is that, at a point in time in which Australian Defence Force men and women are not only on the ground in Sydney and elsewhere in New South Wales and other parts of Australia responding to COVID-19 critical needs but also on the ground in Kabul in Afghanistan and at Al Minhad supporting the most extraordinary emergency evacuation we have undertaken in decades, all that Senator— The PRESIDENT: Order! I take the point of order, Senator Payne. Senator Keneally. Senator Keneally: The question was not about Kabul. The question was not about Afghanistan. It was about the Morrison-Joyce government use of the ADF in political advertising and in COVID vaccines. The PRESIDENT: Senator Keneally, I'm going to remind senators, when they stand to raise a point of order: don't just go straight to restating the question. At least try and have a semblance of the standing orders by mentioning a standing order. Senator Keneally, I have ruled before that, when questions are politically loaded, a minister can respond in kind. Your earlier questions were specific, and I think a lot of specific information was provided. There's an opportunity to debate them after question time, but that had loaded language, and the minister is in order in responding. Senator PAYNE: As I said in my previous response, as at 22 August, across the 12 affected local government areas of concern in Greater Sydney, 777 primary care and Commonwealth sites are administering the AstraZeneca vaccine, including those 590 general practices, seven general practice respiratory clinics, four Aboriginal community controlled health services and 176 community pharmacies. (Time expired)