Senator WATT (Queensland—Minister for Agriculture, Fisheries and Forestry and Minister for Emergency Management) (14:07): It's time for a few home truths when it comes to home affairs, Senator O'Neill, so I thank you for your question. Today, the Albanese government has flagged its intention to introduce legislation that will enable Australian citizenship to be stripped from individuals who pose a real and immediate risk to our community. The Senate will be aware that this is not the first time such a scheme has been brought before this parliament. In fact, those opposite had two attempts at it—in 2015 and 2019. The laws they introduced in 2015 were so unworkable that they had to repeal them. The second attempt was even worse, being ruled unconstitutional by the High Court this year. Who were the architects of these ill-devised laws? They were none other than the person who they never mention—Mr Scott Morrison—and the person who's out there lecturing us day after day, Mr Peter Dutton. What a complete mess Mr Dutton left the Home Affairs portfolio in. Report after— Opposition senators interjecting — Senator WATT: They don't like it! Let me remind you. Report after report found gaping holes— The PRESIDENT: Order on my left! Order! Senator McKenzie: 'The votes are back in town!' The PRESIDENT: Senator McKenzie, will we just wait for you to come to order after I've called it? Minister Watt, please continue. Senator WATT: They just don't like hearing the truth, do they? Report after report found gaping holes in Mr Dutton's rorted visa system, which was letting criminals into the country. It was a visa system that allowed foreign organised-crime syndicates into the country. These included the Albanian mafia, who engaged in drug trafficking, money laundering, slavery and sexual exploitation. Who was the minister the whole time that was happening? It was Mr Dutton. What did he do in the wake of all these reports? He cut compliance officers by 50 per cent. That was his solution—reducing compliance, not increasing it. There was a visa backlog of one million applications. Who was the minister who let that happen? It was Mr Dutton. For all his tough talk on boat arrivals, what happened when Mr Dutton was in charge? In 2018, a boat ran aground in Far North Queensland carrying 15 asylum seekers. The PRESIDENT: Senator O'Neill, a first supplementary?