Senator BIRMINGHAM (South Australia—Minister for Finance, Vice-President of the Executive Council and Leader of the Government in the Senate) (14:20): [by video link] I continue to urge and encourage all Australians—including Indigenous Australians, Torres Strait Islanders and, indeed, all parts of our population—to respond and to seize the earliest opportunities to be vaccinated. We're seeing amazing growth in Australia in the vaccine program. We have seen that growth from four weeks ago, when 42 per cent of the population had had a first dose, to now nearly 59 per cent of the Australian population having had a first dose. We are working— The PRESIDENT: Senator Hanson-Young, on a point of order? Senator Hanson-Young: On a point of order, Senator Thorpe asked specifically about Indigenous peoples, and I'd like the minister to answer that question. When will they be vaccinated? The PRESIDENT: There was a statistic asserted as a preamble to that. I believe the minister is being directly relevant to that with this part of the answer. I'll continue to listen carefully, but I can't instruct him how to answer the question. Senator BIRMINGHAM: We have more than 9,000 access points across Australia for people to get a vaccine now. That is only going to grow. We are working, particularly across western and far western New South Wales, with the Royal Flying Doctor Service, with other vaccine providers, with Primary Health Networks and with Aboriginal community controlled health services to make sure that we have even more points of access for individuals, as we're doing across Indigenous communities right around the country. The message must be clear: to take advantage of these opportunities to help drive vaccination rates even higher. (Time expired) The PRESIDENT: Senator Thorpe, a final supplementary question?