Mr PORTER (Pearce—Attorney-General, Minister for Industrial Relations and Leader of the House) (12:13): I would just put the government's position with respect to the Leader of the Opposition's amendment. We have had weekly meetings with the opposition. We have explained that we are—sorry? The SPEAKER: You're speaking on the amendment? Mr PORTER: I am, yes. The SPEAKER: Okay. Well, the question is that the amendment be agreed to, and I call the Leader of the House. Mr PORTER: The government will not be agreeing with the amendment. By way of context to that, we have had weekly meetings with the opposition. We've explained that we fully intend to have additional sitting weeks between now and August. This was clearly put, so any suggestion that there is any intention on the part of the government to leave a void in sitting between this week and what was otherwise to be the next scheduled sitting week, which I think is 11 August, is not correct. We've clearly explained there will be additional sitting weeks. There will be a revised parliamentary calendar produced shortly. That will set out regularised sitting weeks between now and 11 August, and they will be regular and conducted as normally as possible. We are not going to produce that sitting calendar on the date nominated by the opposition in the amendment. We're arguing here over literally a matter of days. The SPEAKER: The question is that the amendment moved by the Manager of Opposition Business be disagreed to. There being more than one voice calling for a division, in accordance with standing order 133 the division is deferred until after the discussion on the Matter of Public Importance. Debate adjourned.