Senator WATT (Queensland—Minister for the Environment and Water) (14:37): I think, even for Senator Shoebridge, it is a stretch to be implying that the government of Australia, the Albanese Labor government, is responsible for the rallies we saw over the weekend. This government could not have been clearer in our condemnation of those rallies before, during and after the events. Unlike certain others in this chamber, who wanted to be against the rallies until they were held, and then started retreating at a rate of knots to say, 'Maybe it was okay after all,' we have been absolutely unequivocal in our condemnation and opposition to those rallies. While it might suit the Greens party's political interest to try to accuse the Labor government of being responsible for those rallies, I think people will see through that for what it is: just another political cheap shot from a party consigned to irrelevance in this parliament. The PRESIDENT: Senator Shoebridge? Senator Shoebridge: My question was about the dehumanising right-wing anti-immigration legislation. The minister is yet to address it, probably because of his embarrassment— The PRESIDENT: Senator Shoebridge, first of all, when you stand, you inform me that it's a point of order, which I presume it was, but you let me know it is. The minister is being relevant to your question. Minister, please continue. Senator WATT: The legislation that Senator Shoebridge was referring to, before he tried to blame the Labor Party for rallies of extremists over the weekend, makes targeted amendments to the Migration Act to expressly exclude procedural fairness from applying to the exercise of powers that deal with the taking of action in relation to third-country-reception arrangements. As to why the government is introducing this legislation, the point at principle that we're adopting is if someone does not have a right to a visa in Australia then that person should leave. That is the situation in relation to the NZYQ cohort, as it's become known. That is the basis of that legislation. That principle—that if you don't have a right to a visa in Australia you should leave Australia—is the basic principle of any functioning migration system. But it would appear that the Greens party does not support that principle, that someone without a right to a visa should leave Australia. The PRESIDENT: Senator Shoebridge, first supplementary?