Mr ALBANESE (Grayndler—Leader of the Opposition) (14:54): I seek leave to move the following motion: That the House: (1) notes the Morrison Government is weighed down by scandal and integrity issues, including: (a) the corrupt sports rorts scheme, with colour-spreadsheets used to divide up taxpayer money, and emails going in and out of the Prime Minister's office; (b) airport rorts in which the Government paid $30 million for a piece of land worth $3 million; (c) stacking the Administrative Appeals Tribunal with Liberal mates; (d) paying a Liberal Party mate and former Crosby Textor pollster more than a million dollars for taxpayer-funded market research; (e) the Prime Minister's Office recommending long-term Liberal mate Peter Crone for a lucrative Government contract; (f) the ASIC Chair and former Deputy Chair together claiming more than $180,000 to which they weren't entitled; (g) Australia Post spending $20,000 on Cartier watches; (h )reports the Assistant Treasurer used taxpayer-funded staff to branch stack; and (i) the Minister for Energy being involved in too many scandals to count; and (2) therefore condemns the Prime Minister for treating taxpayers' money as though it is his own. Leave not granted. Mr ALBANESE: I move: That so much of the standing orders be suspended as would prevent the Leader of the Opposition from moving the following motion forthwith: That the House: (1) notes the Morrison Government is weighed down by scandal and integrity issues, including: (a) the corrupt sports rorts scheme, with colour-spreadsheets used to divide up taxpayer money, and emails going in and out of the Prime Minister's office; (b) airport rorts in which the Government paid $30 million for a piece of land worth $3 million; (c) stacking the Administrative Appeals Tribunal with Liberal mates; (d) paying a Liberal Party mate and former Crosby Textor pollster more than a million dollars for taxpayer-funded market research; (e) the Prime Minister's Office recommending long-term Liberal mate Peter Crone for a lucrative Government contract; (f) the ASIC Chair and former Deputy Chair together claiming more than $180,000 to which they weren't entitled; (g) Australia Post spending $20,000 on Cartier watches; (h )reports the Assistant Treasurer used taxpayer-funded staff to branch stack; and (i) the Minister for Energy being involved in too many scandals to count; and (2) therefore condemns the Prime Minister for treating taxpayers' money as though it is his own. Leave not granted. The watch is ticking on the need for a national integrity commission, and the rot starts at the top.