Senator COLBECK (Tasmania—Minister for Sport and Minister for Senior Australians and Aged Care Services) (14:11): The national plan, which has been publicly released, for everybody to see, contemplates a number of thresholds—70 per cent and 80 per cent vaccination rates across the country—to facilitate a staged process to safely open up the Australian community again, to facilitate movement and to reactivate our economy, in support of all Australians. It doesn't discriminate against Indigenous communities or any other community, to be frank. We want to see vaccination rates in every single community as high as possible. We urge that. With respect to Indigenous Australians and their vaccination, that's why we prioritised them, understanding the sensitivities that exist with respect to Indigenous communities. That's why we opened vaccination to Indigenous Australians in phase 1b on 22 March last year. We made vaccines available to Indigenous Australians very early in the piece. The PRESIDENT: Order, Senator Colbeck. I have Senator Watt on a point of order. Senator Watt: It's on relevance. This was deliberately a very tight question about whether the plan requires First Nations vaccination rates, and we haven't had an answer to that yet. The PRESIDENT: With respect, I was listening very carefully; I appreciate it was a very short, sharp question. Senator Colbeck, I believe, addressed that by saying that the plan did not discriminate. I believe that was the phrase he used. I believe to go any further would be requiring me to instruct the minister how to answer a question, but I believe he is being directly relevant through his answer thus far. A question can be debated after question time. Senator Colbeck. Senator COLBECK: The plan seeks to see all Australians vaccinated as soon as possible. I join Senator Dodson in his condemnation, over the last 24 hours or so, in an article that I have seen today, of those who are peddling antivaccine messages into Indigenous communities. I agree with Senator Dodson fundamentally, and the government will continue to work with Indigenous communities, state governments and the ACCHOs in the interests of getting as many Australians—including Indigenous people—vaccinated as possible. (Time expired) The PRESIDENT: Senator McCarthy, a supplementary question?