Mr MORRISON (Cook—Prime Minister and Minister for the Public Service) (15:04): I'm not going to take lectures from a Labor Party who shut down the live cattle trade in a panicked decision after one television program. Under our government, we're working towards a $100 billion agricultural industry by 2030. This afternoon I'm looking forward to sitting down with the National Farmers Federation, and not only to talk about those projects to achieve and realise what can be gained in our agricultural sector. The agricultural sector at the moment, of course, is going through a difficult period because of the drought, and we've seen a more than 10 per cent fall in farm GDP because of that. But what we do have are the plans to continue to build it. What I am so impressed by is the resilience of the Australian agricultural sector—that, despite the setbacks, they continue to invest and realise their future— The SPEAKER: The Prime Minister will resume his seat. The Manager of Opposition Business on a point of order? Mr Burke: Yes. The question asks about specific expenditure on cattle supply chains and the underspend related to that. That's what it asks about. The SPEAKER: I will call the Prime Minister. Again, I take the point— Mr Fitzgibbon interjecting— The SPEAKER: The member for Hunter is not helping— Mr Tehan interjecting— The SPEAKER: neither is the Minister for Education. The question did ask about some budgeted figures. It also asked about the cattle supply chain. The Prime Minister is certainly being relevant to the policy topic, and I'm also just very conscious he's not quite a minute in. I'm listening to the Prime Minister. Mr MORRISON: It gives me the opportunity to again say that the work we're doing to support our agricultural sector—and I will invite the Minister representing the Minister for Agriculture here in the House to add to that, and I know that the Deputy Prime Minister would also like to add to it. But let's not forget that the Labor Party, when they had the opportunity to support our cattle industry, shopped them off. They sold them out, and they did so as a result of their addiction to policies of panic and crisis. Our government does not act with a sense of panic or crisis. We act in the stable and certain way which gives people confidence in the future and enables them to invest and plan for the future, and that's what we're doing in the agricultural sector. I invite the minister to add to the answer.