Mr LITTLEPROUD (Maranoa—Minister for Water Resources, Drought, Rural Finance, Natural Disaster and Emergency Management) (15:07): Could I just say this is about respect. Mr Burke: Mr Speaker— The SPEAKER: I am going to hear from the— Mr McCormack interjecting— The SPEAKER: Deputy Prime Minister, just confining your talking to when you're at the dispatch box and you've got the call might help. The SPEAKER: The Manager of Opposition Business? Mr Burke: The $145 million program, which is listed in the budget as being for cattle supply chains, is an infrastructure project. The minister who has just been called—it's not in his portfolio. It's in the portfolio of the Deputy Prime Minister, who was just complaining that we were taking a point of order over who it went to. But it's his portfolio. The dollar figure, the title of the program there— Mr McCormack: You should have asked me the question then, not 'Farmer Joe over there! The SPEAKER: Well, look— Mr Burke: I'm simply saying— The SPEAKER: The Manager of Opposition Business will resume his seat. Mr Neumann interjecting— The SPEAKER: The member for Blair! Mr McCormack: I come from a cattle farm! The SPEAKER: The Deputy Prime Minister will cease interjecting! I'll make a couple of points to the opposition. I do thank the Manager of Opposition Business for pointing that out; it might have been handy to have that in the question! Notwithstanding that, whilst it is an infrastructure project, it is an infrastructure project about cattle—I'm not trying to get too technical—so I think that does have an agricultural element to it. I call the minister. Mr LITTLEPROUD: This is about respect and about restoring a relationship that was destroyed by a panic in 2011, overnight destroying the live cattle trade. What we are doing is slowly putting an environment around the agricultural industry, particularly the live export industry—$1.8 billion a year it is worth to this country. It is important that we continue to make that investment and make that money available for industry to continue to work through the supply chain, particularly more important now, since the ratification of the Indonesian free trade agreement, a proud moment for our nation to be able to trade with our nearest neighbour—267 million people on our doorstep that we now have the opportunity to trade with to give opportunity to our farmers, who will be able to recover quicker from this drought because of the free trade agreements that we have put in place. This is about a suite of measures that complement everything in the agriculture sector, whether it's in infrastructure, whether it's in the agriculture department or whether it's in water, because we understand regional Australia, we understand agriculture and we will deliver for them.