Senator WONG (South Australia—Minister for Foreign Affairs and Leader of the Government in the Senate) (14:51): Thank you, Senator Davey. I also briefly dropped in at an event yesterday— Senator Davey: So did I. Senator WONG: You did too, so you would know that there were also farmers and agricultural producers as well as environmentalists and community people who are supportive of the Murray-Darling Basin Plan. I would also make, if I can, a shout-out to Henry Jones's wife, Gloria, who was there cooking the mullet. Henry, of course, is now— Honourable senators interjecting— Senator WONG: Coorong mullet, I should say. Henry was a fisherman who was a strong advocate for reform of the basin—a very decent man who spent a lot of his life working on these issues. The PRESIDENT: Minister, please resume your seat. Senator Davey? Senator Davey: While I appreciate the minister outlining what happened yesterday—it was delicious mullet—I would like to bring her to the point of the question. She's got a minute left to tell us what modelling the government has done. The PRESIDENT: Thank you. The minister is being relevant. We are talking about the Murray-Darling Basin, as I understand it. Minister, please continue. Senator WONG: Thank you. How is this relevant? President, I know you're from WA, but this is actually about the Murray-Darling Basin Plan. That's how it's relevant. I know that the National Party doesn't support the Murray-Darling Basin Plan. I know that they say that they really don't want to support it, and they won't recognise the enormous amount of environmental and economic work that was done for the plan. Your government adopted the plan, but the problem was you adopted it so that Senator Birmingham and Senator Ruston could go to Adelaide and say, 'We've got the Murray-Darling Basin Plan,' but you just made sure you never did anything. So you actually didn't deliver, almost, any water. The great political solution for the coalition and their enormous division on water policy was that you adopt a plan but you don't actually do anything about it. Well, that isn't the approach we'll be taking, because we recognise, as Malcolm Turnbull did, that you have to have reform in the Murray-Darling Basin. The PRESIDENT: Senator Davey, first supplementary?