Senator WONG (South Australia—Minister for Foreign Affairs and Leader of the Government in the Senate) (14:23): The Prime Minister is seeking to implement not only an election commitment but a call from First Nations peoples for this action. So, when you talk about consent, my view and what I'd put to you, Senator, through you, President, is that the consent is a representative group which has come together— Senator Thorpe interjecting— Senator WONG: I appreciate you may not agree with it. But people from across this country, First Nations peoples, have come together and they have asked for this. They have put out their— Honourable senators interjecting— Senator WONG: I'm not sure if Senator Thorpe and Senator Price want me to continue, or did you— Senator McKenzie: People talk across the chamber all the time. Senator WONG: No. No— The PRESIDENT: Senator McKenzie, interjections are disorderly. Minister, please continue. Senato r WONG: My point is this: I appreciate that you have a difference of views, but we are responding to—and Senator Dodson, I'm sure, could speak with much greater eloquence than I—the call from First Nations peoples across this country as exemplified and as captured— Senator Thorpe: Point of order on relevance: as the only sitting member in this place that was at Uluru, there was no consensus. There was no consent. I was there. Were you? The PRESIDENT: Senator Thorpe, please resume your seat. The minister is being relevant to the question that you asked. Minister Wong, please continue. Senator WONG: Well, this is a call that we wish to respond to. (Time expired) The PRESIDENT: Senator Thorpe, a second supplementary?