Ms LEY (Farrer—Deputy Leader of the Opposition) (14:05): My question is to the Minister for Immigration, Citizenship and Multicultural Affairs. Buying a first home is getting harder and harder for young Australians. The share of rental properties available to rent is now 54 per cent below where it was at the start of the pandemic. Yet the Albanese Labor government has granted over 500,000 visas in the last year, with 1.6 million arrivals projected over the next five years. Where on earth will these people live? What additional stress will this record number place on Australia's housing crisis? The SPEAKER: I want to hear from the Leader of the House. Mr Burke: Once again, in terms of asking questions to the correct minister for their responsibilities, I know that it's possible for the Prime Minister to take any question or for it to go to any other minister, but the direction of questions is consistently—if you listen to the whole preamble and where the question is headed—going to a different minister to the person who has policy carriage. The SPEAKER: I want to hear from the Leader of the Opposition. Mr Dutton: As is well known, included in the ministerial responsibilities for the minister for immigration are the criteria that need to be decided upon before he settles on the figure of 500,000 people a year. The reality is that the minister needs to take into consideration, as he would, the advice from Treasury, Finance and other departments about the impact of this Albanese government decision to bring in 1.6 million people in five years. Housing is a key part of that.