Mr MORRISON (Cook—Prime Minister) (14:30): I'm not aware of the claim that you're referring to, and I'm not going to take it at face value from those opposite. Honourable members interjecting— The SPEAKER: Order! I'll get the Prime Minister to start again. I couldn't hear that. Mr MORRISON: I'm not aware of the claim that the member is making, and I'm not about to accept claims at face value from those opposite. I'm not about to accept that from those opposite. The Labor Party thinks sledging, whining and whinging is a policy. That's not how you actually run a government. They have no alternative plans and they have no alternative policies, so they come here every day and engage in personal attacks on me as the Prime Minister. That's okay. Bring it on. If you want to engage in personal sledging and have a crack at where I go for holidays and if I go home and spend Father's Day with my family, bring it on. Bring it on if that's what you're on about. Honourable members interjecting— The SPEAKER: The Prime Minister will resume his seat. Honourable members interjecting— The SPEAKER: Order! If I can't hear the Prime Minister, I can't rule on points of order. The Manager of Opposition Business. Mr Burke: On direct relevance: there is no way that this is relevant to any of the 17 times that he used the term that he's being asked about. The SPEAKER: I would ask the Prime Minister to be relevant to the question. Mr MORRISON: On the topic of former Labor Senator Dastyari, I remember those issues very well because it was former Labor Senator Dastyari who stood up with an official— Mr Khalil interjecting— The SPEAKER: The member for Wills! Mr MORRISON: Sorry? The SPEAKER: I was correcting the member for Wills and cautioning him. Mr MORRISON: Thank you, Mr Speaker. I remember it was former Labor Senator Dastyari who disgraced himself by undermining Australia's sovereignty in relation to a foreign country. That's what former Senator Dastyari did, and he had to leave this place in disgrace. We have seen so many other Labor members, whether at a state level or former Labor members of this place, up on charges, off to jail. They've got enough people in Silverwater prison now to start a branch of the Labor Party there. That's what's going on with the Labor Party, and you can't trust Labor with money, because they're always after yours. Honourable members interjecting— The SPEAKER: Order! Once again, the level of interjections is too high.