Mr PORTER (Pearce—Attorney-General, Minister for Industrial Relations and Leader of the House) (14:12): It is complex for the Leader of the Opposition! Let me read for all members of the House what clause 19 actually says in black and white: 'After "FWC may" (first occurring), insert "also".' Wow! He cannot even get the right clause. He simply— Honourable members interjecting— The SPEAKER: The minister will resume his seat. Members on both sides will cease interjecting. The Leader of the Opposition, on a point of order? Mr Albanese: The minister is misleading the House. Clause 19— The SPEAKER: No, you need to state the point of order. Mr Albanese: He can't just stand there and make things up, Mr Speaker. Honourable members interjecting— The SPEAKER: The Leader of the Opposition will resume his seat. The Treasurer will cease interjecting. We'll get to you, Member for Clark; I won't forget. The Leader of the Opposition has asked a question. On how the minister answers it, I need to ensure they're relevant to the question, but I can't vet all statements for accuracy. In fact, I don't have a role in that. I just simply need to make sure he is being relevant to the question, and I think he was being relevant to the question. The Leader of the Opposition, on a further point of order? Mr Albanese: On a point of order with regard to relevance, and it goes to this— The SPEAKER: But you've just had a point of order— Mr Albanese: No; it wasn't on relevance. The SPEAKER: What was it on? Mr Albanese: It was on accuracy. The SPEAKER: Well, there isn't one. Mr Albanese: You've now said I can do it on relevance. The SPEAKER: No, no. I showed great leniency in assuming it was on relevance. There is no point of order on accuracy in answers. Mr Albanese: And you ruled that out of order. The SPEAKER: I didn't rule it out of order; I took it as a point of order on relevance. Mr Tim Wilson interjecting— The SPEAKER: Member for Goldstein! I'll hear from the Leader of the Opposition, without interruption. Mr Albanese: In order to be relevant, the minister has to refer to the clause which is in the question, which says: The FWC may approve the agreement under this section if the agreement is not a greenfields agreement and the FWC is satisfied that: it is appropriate to do so taking into account all the circumstances, including— And then there are four separate sections and a part (b). He has to refer to that, because that is what I quoted in the question, not whatever it is that he's going on about in order to make a point and avoid the substance of the cuts by the suspension of the better off overall test. The SPEAKER: The Leader of the Opposition will resume his seat. The minister has the call. Mr PORTER: I do see what the member is getting at. There are two clauses that work in tandem. Those words that he just read are there. They say— Honourable members interjecting— The SPEAKER: The minister will pause for a second. Members will cease interjecting. I want to make it very clear I'm now issuing a general warning. With everyone listening: if you are ejected for interjecting, don't be surprised. The minister has the call. Mr PORTER: The provisions would amend section 189 of the Fair Work Act, which was put into that act by members opposite, which has a protection around the BOOT test which says that any decision of the Fair Work Commission could not be contrary to the public interest. Those words, which you put into the act—indeed, which were just read out by the Leader of the Opposition—are the same protections precisely replicated by the words that would be inserted by this government in this bill.