Mr ALBANESE (Grayndler—Prime Minister) (14:19): I thank the Leader of the Opposition for the question. There have been a range of comments made in just the last 24 hours. On Monday we received the information and the advice. On Monday afternoon we had the appropriate committees enacted. By Tuesday, we had got our personnel out of Iran to safety and had expelled the ambassador here from Australia, along with three other diplomats from the Iranian embassy. We received bipartisan support, I recall, for that action, but it appeared that it didn't last too long. The member asked about information and when it came back. Indeed, to quote someone: 'Yes, there were calls to list the IRGC back when I was the chair of the intelligence committee, which was from 2017 through to late 2020. The government makes those decisions. The government makes the decision to amend the Criminal Code and then list a terrorist organisation.' Ms Ley: I raise a point of order on relevance, if I may, Mr Speaker. This is a question about the government's decision to reject national security advice two years ago. The Prime Minister is not in order. The SPEAKER: The Prime Minister was asked about the decision that was taken and on what basis that was. He'll need to make his answer directly relevant, ensuring that he complies with the standing orders. If he's got information to give the House about how the decision was made, he's entitled to do that. Mr ALBANESE: It's certainly very relevant because the member for Canning, the shadow minister for this area, went on to say today: 'For whatever reason the coalition government did not want to. In fact, we had briefs as to the reason why which I can't discuss here.' That is what he said because he understands intelligence. 'I stand with the government, as does the rest of the coalition'—that's what the shadow minister responsible said this morning. This is backed up by his statement yesterday: 'The decision was a good one. It was backed up by forensic intelligence provided by ASIO and other partners.' Ms Ley interjecting— The SPEAKER: The Leader of the Opposition has raised a point of order on relevance. She's only entitled to one point of order on relevance. Ms Ley: I'm asking whether the Prime Minister is following your previous instruction. The statements of the member for Canning more than two years ago are not relevant to the question. The SPEAKER: We've been down this path before. There's no ruling that I'm going to make around this. If you were not happy with it at the time when I brought the Prime Minister back to it that would have been the time to take action. You can't go back in time and ask for a second chomp at something. Honourable members interjecting— The SPEAKER: Order! We're just going to handle this respectfully. It's an important issue. The Prime Minister is going to continue and make sure his remarks are directly relevant regarding on what basis the decision was made. Mr ALBANESE: I've gone on to quote someone who knows something about intelligence and national security about why intelligence information isn't the subject of public debate. That was the quote from the member for Canning. Indeed, the member for Barker backed this up. This is what he had to say: 'I congratulate the Prime Minister on his response. It's been swift. It's been decisive. He's to be congratulated for that.' (Time expired) Mr Burns interjecting— The SPEAKER: Order! The member for Macnamara is warned.