Mr ALBANESE (Grayndler—Prime Minister) (14:08): It must have been an interesting tactics committee meeting. Can you imagine it? 'I shouldn't ask that question. Maybe you should ask that question.' 'No. Go ahead.' Is there anyone in their tactics committee who doesn't have an issue? That was the question. My government has been transparent. We have a code of conduct. When there have been any issues they have been— Mr Dutton: Mr Speaker— Mr ALBANESE: Oh, come on! The SPEAKER: I ask the Prime Minister to pause. I call the Leader of the Opposition. Mr Dutton: Mr Speaker, the point of order is relevance. The Prime Minister has been asked two tight questions and he cannot give a straight answer. The SPEAKER: Has the Prime Minister concluded his answer? Mr ALBANESE: No. The SPEAKER: I call the Prime Minister to return to the question. Mr ALBANESE: I'm happy to say more. Mr Dutton: You cannot give a straight answer. Answer the question Mr ALBANESE: If you stop, then I'll answer the question. That's the way it works. If you interject, I'll sit down. That's the way it works. For those opposite: what we're already seeing on that side is people being set up. Mr Hamilton: Answer the question! The Speaker said answer the question. The SPEAKER: The member for Groom will cease interjecting. Mr ALBANESE: My advice to those opposite is when someone hands you a question you don't have to answer it. Do you want me to sit down? Mr Dutton: He's committed to answering the question; he should answer it. The SPEAKER: I call the Prime Minister to return to the question. Mr ALBANESE: I wonder if he yells that loudly in their tactics meeting. I wonder if he does that. The fact is that the opposition are seeking to make something out of a short-lived oversight because they have nothing else to say—nothing about the cost of living, nothing about the Jobs and Skills Summit, nothing about the energy crisis that we've inherited, nothing about the fact people can't access to child care, nothing about the crisis in aged care. What they ask about is a minister who—it's not surprising that the minister here, the member for Eden-Monaro, the person who has turned Eden-Monaro into a safe Labor seat, is a target for those opposite. Remember when it was called the bellwether seat? Not anymore. This is a minister of integrity. This is a minister of honesty. This is a minister who's upfront, and I stand by this minister. This minister, what she did—and she has declared that occurred—is that shares were given to her husband. (Time expired)