Mr GILES (Scullin—Minister for Immigration, Citizenship and Multicultural Affairs) (14:04): The Albanese government is getting on with fixing Australia's broken immigration system—a system broken by those opposite and no more so than when the Leader of the Opposition was the minister responsible. I'm proud to be working with my friend the Minister for Home Affairs to build a system that Australians can trust, helping us get the skills we need while bringing migration levels down to normal levels. We understand that competent and sensible administration of our visa system is something that is fundamentally important, ensuring that we remain an attractive destination whilst bringing migration levels down. We're doing that because of five actions the government has taken: closing COVID loopholes opened up by those opposite; strengthening integrity, unlike the former minister, who halved immigration compliance; ending settings that drive long-term temporary stays; tackling exploitation, which was another matter on which he sat on his hands; and targeting skilled migration so that we are addressing genuine shortages. Martin Parkinson, the former Treasury secretary, described the 'absolutely and utterly broken migration system' as a reflection of 'almost a decade of wilful neglect', symbolised, as members opposite should recognise, by the one million visas in the in-tray when we came into government. Businesses couldn't get the workers they needed. Migrants and other workers were being exploited. Mr Dutton: On relevance, Speaker. You gave good direction before to the minister to say that he could broadly talk on the issues in relation to the question that he'd been asked, but only this minister could stray beyond your original— The SPEAKER: Resume your seat. Please get to the point of order and do not add additional commentary. The point of order is on relevance. Mr Dutton: The government has allowed 500,000 people in during a cost-of-living crisis— The SPEAKER: Resume your seat. This is exactly the point I tried to raise before: with a broad question asking about opinions, the minister is going to be completely relevant because he was asked about such a broad range of topics. He is talking about his decisions as a minister and the actions he's taking. He couldn't be more relevant. The minister has the call. Mr GILES: It seems that the Leader of the Opposition doesn't like being reminded of his record as a minister. Perhaps he should also remember what he said as Leader of the Opposition very recently. He said this: 'We do need an increase in the migration numbers.' He will say and do absolutely anything, this bloke. It isn't just about dividing Australians. We are focused on rebuilding the migration system that he broke.