Senator WONG (South Australia—Minister for Foreign Affairs and Leader of the Government in the Senate) (14:02): First, again, as the Prime Minister and others, including myself, have done: our personal condolences to Ms Gutnick and to all those who have lost a loved one in this horrific attack. It was an attack that was targeted, evil, antisemitic and ISIS inspired, and it was an attack on Jewish Australians—and all of us grieve for every person, every family and every community that has been made to suffer because of hate filled and senseless violence. The Prime Minister has made very clear the sense of responsibility and the weight of responsibility that he feels for an atrocity that happened, as he said, while he is Prime Minister, and he has said publicly he is sorry for the grief and pain that the Jewish community and the entire nation have experienced, as have I. Our responsibility now is to do all we can to ensure this does not happen again. That is the solemn responsibility that this government and this parliament have. That is what we are seeking to do—to listen to the Jewish community the entire nation— The PRESIDENT: Senator Cash, a point of order? Senator Cash: It is a point of order on relevance. The question was direct in its terms—will the Prime Minister actually, for the first time since 7 October 2023, apologise to Jewish Australians for your government's disgraceful failings? The PRESIDENT: Senator Cash, calling a point of order is not an opportunity to make a statement. The minister is being directly relevant to your question. Minister Wong, did you wish to continue? Senator WONG: I addressed your question directly, Senator Cash, and I did so because I think it is important. But I also believe, and I think Australians believe, that it is important for us not just to speak about this but to act to ensure this does not happen again. That is why this government prioritised the drafting of— (Time expired) The PRESIDENT: Senator Cash, first supplementary?