Mr FITZGIBBON (Hunter) (14:15): My question is to the Prime Minister, and I refer him to his previous answer on the question of the coalition agreement. Can the Prime Minister confirm that his government has spent almost three years and tens of thousands of taxpayers' money on lawyers to hide the secret coalition agreement? Why is the Prime Minister spending tens of thousands of taxpayers' money in the Administrative Appeals Tribunal and the Federal Court to hide the inept deal the Prime Minister struck to get his job? Will he now commit to releasing the secret coalition agreement? The SPEAKER: That question is out of order. Mr Fitzgibbon interjecting— The SPEAKER: Yes, happy to hear from you. Mr FITZGIBBON: I accept you couldn't hear it over— The SPEAKER: The Manager of Opposition Business. Mr Burke: Mr Speaker, raising a point of order— The SPEAKER: Why don't I give you an explanation first? Mr Burke: It must be in order for us to ask about the cost of legal fees that the government has used. They can't be spending taxpayers' money and we're not allowed to ask about it. The SPEAKER: I made the point about the coalition agreement. It did refer to the previous answer. I've said on numerous occasions: you just can't refer to a previous answer and ask a separate question. If you want to ask a question simply about legal costs, you need to frame it that way. The substance of that question— Mr Fitzgibbon interjecting— The SPEAKER: No, look, the member for Hunter will resume his seat. He's not going to help by interrupting at this point. He's certainly not going to help himself—put it that way. I'm making it very clear: I'm not going to allow the Practice to be warped. It specifically refers to coalition agreements. I think I said: on page 554, it specifically refers to that. If you want to ask a question about legal costs, you need to ask that, and not ask it under the cover of a coalition agreement, which is specifically in the Practice as not being in order. You've got a choice: you can rephrase it, or we're going to move on. Mr FITZGIBBON: My question is to the Prime Minister, and I ask him how much his government has spent with respect to the lawyers it has engaged in the matter of Joel Fitzgibbon v Malcolm Turnbull, Prime Minister of Australia?