Mr ALBANESE (Grayndler—Prime Minister) (14:08): I thank the Deputy Leader of the Opposition for her question, but I'm somewhat confused about how she had that quote, because the Leader of the Opposition said this on 12 October— Opposition members interjecting— Mr ALBANESE: It is about me, funnily enough; it's never about anything positive from them, because they've got nothing to say. They have nothing to say! Mr Taylor interjecting— Mr ALBANESE: I'll wait. The SPEAKER: Order! The member for Hume. We will continue to hear the Prime Minister in silence. Mr ALBANESE: Mr Speaker, there he was in a hard-hitting interview on 2GB, and he said this: 'The Prime Minister has been obsessed with the Voice from the day he was elected. Never mentioned it before the last election, I might say.' So I'm confused by the question, because the Leader of the Opposition has said that we didn't say anything before the election. Now they stand up and ask a question, saying, 'Well, you said all this. Why haven't you implemented it?' The truth— Mr Su kkar interjecting— The SPEAKER: The Prime Minister will pause. Member for Deakin, I'd like to hear from the Deputy Leader of the Opposition in silence. She has the call. Ms Ley: A point of order on relevance: how can the Prime Minister's reflection on the opposition be relevant to a question about something he said? Surely a conviction politician like the Prime Minister— The SPEAKER: The Deputy Leader of the Opposition was pushing the envelope there. I think she knows that. Points of order can't be abused, and if any more of that happens today people won't be warned; they'll just leave. The Prime Minister has the call and will be heard in silence. Mr ALBANESE: My point is the contradiction in the question that's being asked by the Deputy Leader of the Opposition, which is very different from her leader, to whom she's very loyal, of course. The Leader of the Opposition has said we didn't mention the Voice before the election campaign. But then they come in here. They say, before the referendum, 'Oh, well, you're just too obsessed by the referendum,' when we're getting on with doing the work that we've done on the economy, on health, on education, on TAFE—and everything else. Then, after the referendum they come in here, and they ask every question on the same thing, on the same thing, on the same thing. Mr Fletcher: This is electrifying stuff. Mr ALBANESE: I concede to the member for Bradfield, who's as interesting today as he was when he was on the Sydney uni SRC with me—who brings such life to this chamber. The SPEAKER: The Prime Minister will return to the question. Mr ALBANESE: We said we would have a referendum. We did. We said we'd respect the outcome of that referendum. We have. We said we'd listen to Indigenous Australians. We will continue to do so. We said that we would make a practical difference to improve the lives of Indigenous Australians, and that's precisely what we will do.