Senator CASH (Western Australia—Attorney-General, Minister for Industrial Relations and Deputy Leader of the Government in the Senate) (14:21): Senator Waters, I will take the end of your question just as trite commentary. The Morrison government, as you know, have made very clear our intent to establish the Commonwealth Integrity Commission. In fact, we have already put in place the required funding for when the legislation for the Commonwealth Integrity Commission is passed. Senator Waters, you may be aware that we have actually committed $106.7 million of new money to the Commonwealth Integrity Commission. This is in addition to the $40.7 million in funding that we have provided for the Australian Commission for Law Enforcement Integrity, which will be transferred to the commission. That will take it to a total of $147.4 million. This is incredibly important legislation and we need to ensure that the model is the right model. As such, we have conducted a nationwide consultation process on the exposure draft legislation to establish the commission. In fact, 333 detailed submissions were received and 46 consultations, meetings and roundtables occurred during the consultation period. Senator Waters: Mr President, I have a point of order on relevance. My question went to whether the model would be able to investigate all of the rorts. I know the answer's no, but the minister needs to address that question. The PRESIDENT: As you say, Senator Waters, your question addressed the model. The minister was being directly relevant as to the model. Senator CASH: As I said, we are consulting on the model. That was what the exposure draft legislation consultation was all about. The government is now considering the feedback on the model. The PRESIDENT: Senator Waters, a supplementary question?