Mr MORRISON (Cook—Prime Minister and Minister for the Public Service) (14:01): I can assure the House that this government is united on the need to lower taxes. I can assure the House that the government are united on the need to build infrastructure, as we are, and we are united on the need to build the dams—that's climate action now. I can say that the government are united on the need to continue to expand our trade borders, as we have done. We've increased under this government the amount of two-way trade that is subject to export agreements from 26 per cent to 70 per cent. I can say absolutely that this government is united on the need to bring our Defence Force funding and spending to two per cent of GDP. The SPEAKER: The Leader of the Opposition on a point of order? Mr Albanese: Yes. I didn't ask whether the government was united. The SPEAKER: No. You go to the point of order. Mr Albanese: We know the answer to that, Mr Speaker. The SPEAKER: The Leader of the Opposition will resume his seat. Mr Albanese: I asked him whether he agreed with the comments of the member for Menzies. The SPEAKER: That last bit wasn't broadcast, because I asked the Leader of the Opposition if he was rising on a point of order and he has not stated what the point of order is. I'm going to give the Leader of the Opposition an opportunity to state what his point of order is, not to restate the question. Okay? Mr Albanese: Relevance, Mr Speaker. We didn't ask about the unity of the government. We know the answer to that. The SPEAKER: The Leader of the Opposition will resume his seat. I'm just going to say to the Leader of the Opposition—and I'm still pondering whether the question is strictly in order—that, being the generous person I am, I refer you to— Mr Albanese interjecting— The SPEAKER: I don't have to be generous, if you're going to complain. I've made the point before when questions of this sort of wide-ranging nature are asked that you can't demand the responder simply give a 'yes' or 'no' answer, so I think it did open the gates quite wide. The Prime Minister has the call. Mr MORRISON: I can tell you that we're united on the need to take action on the drought and support drought funds. I can tell you that we're united on the position of having temporary exclusion orders for terrorists and mandatory sentencing for paedophiles and on cracking down on farm invaders. I can tell the House that we're united on the need to ensure that we meet our emissions reduction targets, not by increasing taxes on people, not by putting up people's electricity prices and not by walking away from the jobs of Australians in rural and regional areas. That's what we're united on. Ms Butler interjecting— The SPEAKER: The member for Griffith is warned. Mr MORRISON: We're united on what we took to the Australian people. What we took to the Australian people was an economic plan to create jobs, and that's what's happening. That's what we took to the Australian people. Once upon a time there was a Labor government that actually did believe in creating jobs. It was the Hawke-Keating government. Given he is referring to a comment that was first made by the former Prime Minister, Mr Hawke, I will refer to what the Leader of the Opposition used to say about the Hawke government. He said, in an article quoted in The Sydney Morning Herald, 'The Hawke government had lost touch with people. When they talk about wages and budget deficits, they talk about it like it's out of a text box. They appear to have an absolute contempt for working-class people. Someone like Keating can put himself up as the possible Labor PM but he is more comfortable mixing with millionaires and business executives than he is with working-class people.' This mob are not a patch on Hawke and Keating. They have nothing in common with them. Mr Burke: I'd ask the Prime Minister to quote the article from the previous millennium that he was quoting from. The SPEAKER: You can't do that, unfortunately. Mr Burke: Any in the previous century that he was quoting from? The SPEAKER: The Manager of Opposition Business will resume his seat. Was the Prime Minister quoting from a confidential document? Mr MORRISON: Yes.