Mr BURKE (Watson—Minister for Employment and Workplace Relations, Minister for the Arts and Leader of the House) (15:45): The days of these wedge motions being put to the parliament and going to a vote end now. The harm that is being done is beyond belief. To be telling people, when there is a government calling for ceasefire, that somehow it is calling for conflict is deliberate misinformation. I don't see why misinformation coming from the Left is somehow noble when misinformation coming from the Right is so wrong. People in our electorates genuinely have real fear of what is happening. For them, it is not a political game. I put this one point: when the resolution was put on a suspension of standing orders from the Greens political party last time, it was a procedural motion. The question of recognition was never before this parliament, and yet the Greens chose to message something to Australia and to the world that was inaccurate. And they got headlines around the world that hurt the Palestinian cause but helped the Greens harvest votes. What sort of party, on an issue like that, makes a decision to harvest their own votes? I move: That the debate be adjourned. The SPEAKER: The question is that the debate be adjourned. A division having been called and the bells having been rung— The SPEAKER: As there are fewer than five members on the side for the noes in this division, I declare the question resolved in the affirmative in accordance with standing order 127. The names of those members who are in the minority will be recorded in the Votes and Proceedings. Question agreed to. The SPEAKER: Before I call the member for Warringah, I will ask the member for Solomon to assist the House and withdraw what he said earlier. Mr Gosling: I'm happy to withdraw.