Mr MORRISON (Cook—Prime Minister and Minister for the Public Service) (14:05): As you'd know, any employment matter of a member of parliament is a matter— Opposition members interjecting— The SPEAKER: Members on my left! The Prime Minister will pause for a second. I say to members interjecting, like the member for McMahon and the member for Hotham, that I'm not going to be put in a position where members are loudly interjecting when it's my job to listen to the question and to the answer. That's the task I face every day, irrespective of the views of members interjecting. I simply can't do that properly. If interjections keep occurring, like they just did, those members will be ejected. Interjections are disorderly in every form. The Prime Minister has the call. Mr MORRISON: The matters that I raised with the member for Hughes when we met several weeks ago related, of course, to the various statements he had made concerning the government's response to the pandemic and the health measures put in place. It's also true that, in the last few weeks, I became aware of some other matters which the Department of Finance— Opposition members interjecting— Mr MORRISON: I'm happy to answer the question, Mr Speaker. The SPEAKER: The Prime Minister has the call. Mr MORRISON: We have initiated a process that is looking into those precise matters that came to my attention a few weeks ago. Mr Albanese interjecting— Mr MORRISON: The interjections of the Leader of the Opposition seem to confuse the fact that I have long held issues regarding a particular staff member and their performance in that office, not related to the issues he referred to in asking that question. That is a matter that I've raised on numerous occasions, but that reached a more serious point in recent weeks. I raised those matters with the member for Hughes. He undertook to take certain actions on behalf of those discussions. Those actions were not taken. The member for Hughes has taken his decision today.