Mr ALBANESE (Grayndler—Prime Minister) (14:05): I thank the member for her question, and I can confirm that tomorrow does represents 10 months since the election because I remember it well. In those 10 months what we've been doing is economic reform, social reform, environmental reform, and making sure that we fulfil our first responsibility as a government, to make Australians safer by looking after our national security. I can confirm that we have been dealing with domestic issues, such as ensuring that people have access to cheaper pharmaceuticals from 1 January and cheaper child care from 1 July and that 180,000 Australians are benefitting from fee-free TAFE that we have introduced while addressing the skill shortages. We have also been making sure that the mistakes— The SPEAKER: The Prime Minister will pause. The question was around electricity prices, cost of living, families paying less for groceries. The prime minister is being relevant, but I'll hear from the Deputy Leader of the Opposition on a point of order. Ms Ley: On relevance, Mr Speaker. As you've just said, the question was about mortgage prices, grocery prices and lower electricity prices, and the Prime Minister has not mentioned any of those once. The SPEAKER: Resume your seat. When a question is broad, covering a whole range of topics, under the standing orders the Prime Minister is being entirely in order, and I give him the call. Mr ALBANESE: It has been a good 10-month period because what we've been doing is going through, fulfilling the commitments that we made at the election, as you go along the front row here, making sure we have a national anticorruption commission that will be up and running this year after the legislation being passed—legislation that was promised by those opposite way back in 2018, but not only not passed but not even introduced into this parliament. We had the robodebt royal commission, exposing the tragic consequences of what happened with a scheme that was illegal. That won't occur on our watch. We have got significant reform right across the board under this government. Honourable members interjecting— The SPEAKER: The members for Bowman and Groom will cease interjecting. Mr ALBANESE: I thank the Deputy Leader of the Opposition for her question. We haven't been able to get up all the things she would have liked and was advocating for, such as live sheep exports. She made a statement about that just before question time, and I was expecting something like that from the Deputy Leader of the Opposition to show how principled her stance is. But we will continue to implement a Labor agenda, continue to take the government forward, unlike those opposite who say what they're against and haven't come up with a single constructive idea in the last 10 months. Ms Ley interjecting— The SPEAKER: Order! The Deputy Leader of the Opposition will cease interjecting and so will the member for Barker.