Mr ALBANESE (Grayndler—Prime Minister) (14:55): I thank the member for Deakin for his question, and I quite enjoyed being in his electorate on Saturday. I look forward to returning and knocking on the doors of homes in Deakin—homes that we want more of. That's why we have a plan to build 1.2 million homes. That's why we have a $32 billion Homes for Australia plan— Mr Sukkar: One every two minutes! The SPEAKER: The member for Deakin will cease interjecting. Mr ALBANESE: but it doesn't matter what sort of homes, because those opposite are just against it. They combined with the Greens political party in the Senate to defer support for the Housing Australia Future Fund to build more social homes and affordable homes. I'm not surprised by the Liberal Party acting in that way, but they did consistently, and eventually we were able to get that legislation through the Senate. And, if you look at the applications that have come through— Mr Chandler-Mather interjecting— The SPEAKER: The member for Griffith will cease interjecting. Mr ALBANESE: there has been enormous demand through that system. Then, of course, it comes to renters. When it came to the build-to-rent scheme, they combined again, last week, with—guess who? The Greens over there, in what is— The SPEAKER: The Prime Minister will pause. The member for Deakin, on a point of order. Mr Sukkar: The point of order is on relevance. There's no way that the Prime Minister can be relevant to the question by critiquing the opposition. A home needs to be built every two minutes, and homeownership is further out of reach— The SPEAKER: Resume your seat. When you put a question before the House like, 'Why is homeownership out of the reach of Australians?' which was the question at the end—yes, there were other factors in there—that's a fairly broad statement. Obviously, the Prime Minister doesn't agree with that statement, so he's going to outline—the remainder of his answer won't be about the opposition, because, if it is, he won't complete his answer. But, when there is a broad statement, really, at the end, he's going to have a broad answer. Mr ALBANESE: I'm speaking about what our plans have been to build more homes. The build-to-rent tax incentives that were passed in the House of Representatives and blocked in the Senate last week—so you're against more social homes. You're against more private rentals, and the argument for voting against build to rent was that developers would build the homes. That was the argument that the Greens political party put out. Surprise, surprise, developers build homes! That's the way that it works, and that's what the build-to-rent scheme was about. They of course also opposed our rental scheme, but, just so you don't think it's just about less social homes and less private rentals; it's also against more homeownership, because we have our Help to Buy scheme over there in the Senate again. It's shared equity scheme that has been implemented in the past—previous coalition governments introduced them in various places and supported them, particularly in Western Australia—but they're opposed to that as well. They support homes, except for public housing, except for private housing and homeownership, and except for private rentals. Apart from that, they're all for it! The SPEAKER: Order! I'm just reminding the House that we've got the Minister for Climate Change and Energy, the member for Fisher, the member for Fadden, the member for Barker and Leader of the Nationals all on warnings.