Mr ALBANESE (Grayndler—Prime Minister) (14:43): I thank the member for her question. Living standards today went up. There are figures today. The national accounts figures today have gone up. Today the figures show the fastest economic growth of any major advanced economy. And what we're really seeing here, is the projection that, clearly, yesterday—they briefed the Australian that they were going to talk about the economy today. Clearly, they wrote the questions yesterday, before they saw the facts of the accounts. Now, Australia has—I remind the House; I'm asked about international comparisons—faster economic growth than Canada, France, Germany, Italy, Japan, the UK and the US. That is the entire G7—faster economic growth. The UK and Germany recently experienced recessions, along with whole lots of the advanced economic world, including our neighbours in New Zealand. We have a lower unemployment rate than Canada, France, Italy, the UK and the United States. They think that that, somehow, doesn't matter. We on this side think it does matter when people have jobs. That's why we're proud that 1.2 million jobs have been created on our watch—stronger employment growth than Canada, France, Germany, Italy, Japan and the United States, and, at the same time, a higher participation rate than Canada, France— Mr Hastie: Point of order on relevance and today's national accounts. The question goes to immigration, population growth— The SPEAKER: Resume your seat. The Prime Minister is being directly relevant. He's talking about the national accounts. Yes, he was asked one specific thing about that, but he's obviously being directly relevant if he's talking about the figures that he was asked about by the member for Moncrieff. The political question at the end, as I indicated to the House before, completely opens this question up, which is different from the questions yesterday. But this one is broader in its context—I get it—so the Prime Minister is going to be broader in his answer. Honourable members interjecting— The SPEAKER: Order! The Prime Minister can continue and is going to be heard in silence. This is beyond a joke, the way that childish, snide remarks are being added in. It's not dignified. I don't know how else to explain it. I can only imagine what the gallery thinks. The Prime Minister has the call. Mr ALBANESE: He hadn't been on the TV for five or 10 minutes; they have to parade up! The SPEAKER: The Prime Minister will return to the question. Mr ALBANESE: When there are 20 seconds to go, he'll get up; that's what happens. That's the game that is going on here. They're not interested in the economy. They're not interested in jobs. They're not interested in growth. They're not interested in living standards. All they're interested in is parading themselves over who is next to jump into various positions.