Mr DREYFUS (Isaacs—Attorney-General and Cabinet Secretary) (14:53): I thank the member for Macnamara for his question and I acknowledge his recent statements on this matter. What we saw on the steps of the Victorian parliament on the weekend was abhorrent. There is no place in Australian society for public displays of Nazi symbols or the Nazi salute. These are markers of some of the darkest days in the world's history—of ghettos, deportations and mass murder—which touched my own family. Six million Jews perished in the Holocaust. We must never, ever forget. And thousands of Australian service men and women died fighting the Nazi regime. Sadly, the sort of behaviour we saw on the weekend and its accompanying antisemitism is on the rise in Australia and around the world. The Victorian government was swift in its response. The Premier condemned the behaviour of a group of cowardly black-clad men who travelled to Melbourne's CBD seeking notoriety. The Victorian Attorney-General pledged to reform Victorian law to ban displays of the Nazi salute. And, when it was revealed that Victorian Liberal MP Moira Deeming had attended the protest, the Victorian opposition leader announced that he would move to expel Ms Deeming from the Liberal Party. But what have we had from those opposite—in particular their leader? Complete silence. We all know that bigotry and hatred breed in silence. Opposition members interjecting— The SPEAKER: Order! The Attorney-General will pause. Mr McCormack: You called Josh Frydenberg stateless over his mother's citizenship problem. The SPEAKER: The member for Riverina will cease interjecting. I would like to hear from the member for Wannon, and it's got to be on a point of order. Mr Tehan: A point of order: what the Attorney-General has said is absolutely false. The SPEAKER: It's not a point of order, but I'm just going to call the Attorney-General. Mr DREYFUS: The Leader of the Opposition has failed to join his Victorian counterpart and take action to expel Ms Deeming from his party. He has failed to condemn the display of the Nazi salute on the steps of the Victorian parliament. He has been invisible since the weekend. He has done no media. Why? What is so difficult about this? Who is the opposition leader afraid of offending here? Maybe it's Senator Antic, who said in the Senate yesterday, 'Moira did nothing wrong.' For the leader of a party of government to not even condemn the public use of the Nazi salute is astonishing, and it is shameful. The Leader of the Opposition is the most senior Liberal in Australia. Moira Deeming is one of his own, and he's been silent, and he's done nothing. This speaks volumes about the leadership qualities of the Leader of the Opposition, and Australians will take note.