Mr COULTON (Parkes—Minister for Regional Services, Decentralisation and Local Government and Assistant Trade and Investment Minister) (14:41): I will reiterate that in this term of government our government has signed— Opposition members interjecting— Mr COULTON: They did not sign the agreements that his government has done. The SPEAKER: Members on my left will cease interjecting. I just have to point out again that it was a very specific question based on the minister's previous answer. The minister needs to address the question. Mr COULTON: I can say that, when this government came to power, 30 per cent of our trade was covered by free trade agreements. It is now 70 per cent. The SPEAKER: I was about to ask the minister to resume his seat. Has he concluded his answer? Mr Coulton: Yes. The SPEAKER: The Leader of the Opposition on a point of order? Mr Albanese: I might just give the minister the opportunity to correct the record. There are forms of the House which will have to be used otherwise, because that is a misleading of the parliament. He can fix it up. The SPEAKER: The Leader of the Opposition, as much as he might like to, can't give the call to anybody. I am going to make that very clear. The question's been asked. I made it very clear the minister wasn't been relevant in his answer. He has now concluded his answer, which is his right. If there are other issues at other times in the House, that is a matter for members; it is not a matter for me. My job is to enforce the rules, which I've done. I just made it very clear. I asked the minister to be relevant and, in the few sentences that followed, he wasn't. But he has concluded his answer, which is his right. Mr Albanese interjecting— The SPEAKER: No, we are not going to break into a daylong dialogue on the subject.