Senator WONG (South Australia—Minister for Foreign Affairs and Leader of the Government in the Senate) (14:45): I don't believe any fair-minded person looking at Mr Morrison's secret ministries, or the robodebt tragedy, would think that the standards of transparency and accountability to the parliament were sufficient. I would make the point, Senator Babet—because I'm going to anticipate where your next question will go—that, as a consequence of there being an agreement or a decision to remove motions from the Senate Order of Business, the ways in which the crossbench and the now opposition have sought to change that is by a very substantial increase in orders for production of documents. Senator Babet, I am someone who has been here for quite a long time, since 2002. I have never seen as many OPDs used as indiscriminately as the current opposition and crossbench are using them. That is fine, if you— Opposition senators interjecting— Senator WONG: My point is: because we have changed one part of the program—frankly, because it was being utilised in a way that the Senate had not envisaged—we are now seeing a substantial increase in terms of OPDs. Was it 10 today? If those opposite and those on the crossbench wish to use OPDs in that way, so be it. We will provide the information we are able to, and, obviously, information we are not able to provide will not be provided. Again, Senator Babet, I would have thought that we remember what Mr Morrison was like and we remember the lack of accountability to parliament and even to his own cabinet colleagues, when he took their jobs without telling them. (Time expired) The PRESIDENT: Senator Babet, first supplementary.