Mr MORRISON (Cook—Prime Minister and Minister for the Public Service) (14:01): I thank the member for her question. I can tell her that, right now, the Attorney-General is drafting laws to deal with criminalising worker exploitation and, on top of that, there are bills in the parliament right now that deal with the wage theft occurring in the union movement through workers' entitlement funds. I will tell you what this scam deal of the unions does. Mr Brendan O'Connor interjecting— Mr MORRISON: You don't like this answer, do you? Honourable members interjecting— The SPEAKER: The Prime Minister will resume his seat. The members on both sides. The Minister for Health—Minister for Health. The Leader of the Opposition on a point of order. Mr Albanese: It was a very specific question. It went to an issue which is of great concern in the community: the rip-off of people who are working in restaurants. The Prime Minister should address that question. He might refer to Mr Calombaris's restaurants and the millions of dollars. There are a few issues. MasterChef—people know about it. Mr Porter interjecting— Mr Albanese: How about you answer the question? The SPEAKER: The Leader of the House. The Leader of the Opposition will resume his seat. I'm not going to call the Prime Minister straightaway. I think I'll be dealing with this issue reasonably frequently. And, yes, it was a tight question, but the policy topic the Prime Minister is dealing with is wage theft, and I can detain the House very early. I'm listening to the Prime Minister. Provided he's on the policy topic, I believe he's being directly relevant, and I'm going to hear the Prime Minister and he can continue. Mr MORRISON: The Leader of the Opposition with a capital 'O' might like to understand this: that the bill that is in the parliament at the moment deals with workers' entitlements: funds paid into workers' entitlements funds held by unions, which ensures that, when they are in a position to have their entitlements paid out—that is, their wages, about which it doesn't matter whether you're working in a restaurant or anywhere else—the dividends from those funds aren't paid off to other unions, which is the practise of those unions. Now, the Labor Party might not want to recognise that what they are doing in supporting that practice is thieving workers' wages. Mr Brendan O'Connor interjecting— The SPEAKER: The member for Gorton is warned. Mr MORRISON: That's what the Labor Party is doing by supporting practices of unions which are thieving workers' entitlements from those funds. Now, on the matter that the Leader of the Opposition also raised, in relation to the Calombaris matter, that matter was exposed by the Fair Work Ombudsman as a result of the $10 million of extra funds we put into that organisation to ensure that that matter could be exposed. An enforceable undertaking then was secured through the action to protect the workers. On this side of the House, we know whose side we're on; it's the Australian workers' side. The Labor Party—who knows whose side they're on. They weren't on the side of tax cuts for Australians, they weren't on the side of farmers dealing with drought and today, we understand, they are only on the side of militant unions.