Mr MORRISON (Cook—Prime Minister and Minister for the Public Service) (14:55): In initiating that inquiry by the head of Prime Minister and Cabinet— Mr Champion interjecting— The SPEAKER: The member for Spence will leave the House. The member for Spence then left the chamber. Mr MORRISON: which was done promptly after the release of the Auditor-General's report, the head of the PM&C had access to whatever document he required—as would be appropriate, because it was a serious inquiry. And I note that the head of Prime Minister and Cabinet was able to have whatever document he sought, to conduct those inquiries— Opposition members interjecting— The SPEAKER: Members on my left! Mr MORRISON: and the Prime Minister's Office complied with all requests of the secretary. What I can go back to, just to highlight again what the Auditor-General said about the matters that the Leader of the Opposition is raising— Opposition members interjecting— Mr MORRISON: Settle down! Settle down! What he said was: 'For us to see that there was some driver, in this, that we would have to identify, in those representations, there was a bias, there was a correlation between what in those representations and what was the outcome'—he, the Auditor-General, said: 'We didn't see that.' The Auditor-General has been quizzed on these very matters, and he has found no correlation, from the representations that were made from my office, with these outcomes. So the Leader of the Opposition is trying to throw mud while he himself sits in an absolute swamp. We know the Leader of the Opposition had a spreadsheet in his office, when he ran a similar program, which had a column on it that said: 'Labor or Liberal'. That's what he had. And then he threw the rulebook away and gave the money to the projects he wanted to. The SPEAKER: The Prime Minister will resume his seat. Mr Morrison: He's a hypocrite! Opposition members interjecting— Mr Albanese: Mr Speaker— The SPEAKER: The Leader of the Opposition? You're seeking— Mr Albanese: The call. The SPEAKER: I think the Prime Minister has concluded his— Mr Albanese: He's finished. No-one else is jumping. The SPEAKER: No, no, no. We're not going to do that. No, the call alternates. The Manager of Opposition Business? Mr Burke: The Prime Minister should withdraw that final remark. The SPEAKER: Yes. I just say to the Prime Minister: many Speakers have not allowed the word 'hypocrite', and he needs to withdraw it. Mr Morrison: I withdraw, Mr Speaker. The SPEAKER: And I thank the Manager of Opposition Business, because we'd moved on.