Mr TRUSS (Wide Bay—Deputy Prime Minister and Minister for Infrastructure and Regional Development) (15:11): Here we have the member for Grayndler again trying to put his plaque on the Sydney Harbour Bridge, the pyramids and the Tower of Babel. How many more projects does he want to claim as his own? How many more projects does he think he built? Where are all these invisible projects that should have the minister's plaque on them? Honourable members interjecting— The SPEAKER: The Deputy Prime Minister will resume his seat. The member for Grayndler on a point of order, and he needs to state the point of order. Honourable members interjecting— Mr Albanese: Absolutely— The SPEAKER: The member for Grayndler will resume his seat. The member for Dawson and the Leader of the House will cease interjecting. Whoever is interjecting up the back there will cease, too. The member for Grayndler no a point of order, and he needs to state the point of order. Mr Albanese: Absolutely. It is a very specific question about the Melbourne Metro. The SPEAKER: What is the point of order? Mr Albanese: It is about a real project that had real funding and a real business case. The SPEAKER: The member for Grayndler will resume his seat. Mr Albanese: It goes to relevance. The SPEAKER: The member for Grayndler will resume his seat. He is warned that that is an abuse. Mr Albanese interjecting— The SPEAKER: You did not state the point of order, and I asked you to. Mr Albanese interjecting— The SPEAKER: Now you have stated it for the first time. Mr Albanese interjecting— The SPEAKER: You did not. The Deputy Prime Minister has the call. Mr TRUSS: To put it simply, he has not built the Melbourne Metro, either. It is not there. Mr Albanese interjecting— The SPEAKER: The member for Grayndler will withdraw. Honourable members interjecting— The SPEAKER: The Minister for Immigration and Border Protection will cease interjecting. Mr Albanese: I withdraw— The SPEAKER: The member for Grayndler will resume his seat. The Deputy Prime Minister has the call. Mr TRUSS: You do the planning and then you build it, but the reality is that the planning has not been done, either. Should we go out and start putting holes in the ground. That is not a plan. The reality is that the Victorian government acknowledges that it is at least two or three years away from having the Melbourne Metro at the stage where any kind of construction can begin. I stand by the statements that have been made. The reality is that there is no plan that can be costed and put to the stage where it can be assessed by Infrastructure Australia. A couple of years, or more, work has yet to be done. Mr Albanese interjecting— The SPEAKER: The member for Grayndler will cease interjecting. Mr TRUSS: Sorry, Mr Shadow Minister, you do not need to start preparing the plaque for this one any time soon!