Senator ARBIB (New South Wales—Assistant Treasurer, Minister for Small Business, Minister for Sport and Manager of Government Business in the Senate) (14:37): I thank Senator Back for the question and for his interest in industrial relations. I am very happy to answer this because the Labor Party is a party that has stood up for workers time and time again. We are the party that abolished Work Choices. We are the party that abolished AWAs. We made a commitment to the Australian people that we would abolish the ABCC and set up a part of Fair Work Australia to undertake those activities. We have kept our commitment to the Australian people. It will be a tough cop on the beat and will be focused on the sector as a whole. It will be a tough cop on the beat but, at the same time, it will enshrine rights for workers. Senator Back: A point of order on relevance, Mr President. It was not a rant. The question simply was: can the minister name any agency or enforcement body other than the new building and construction industry inspectorate that cannot investigate? He has got nowhere near trying to answer the question. The PRESIDENT: There is no point of order at this stage. I am listening to the minister's answer. Senator ARBIB: The question was broader than what Senator Back has just outlined. The government has kept its commitment to the Australian people and to workers by announcing this new body. As Senator McEwen said, we believe in fairness for Australian workers and fairness for workers in the construction industry. Honourable senators interjecting— The PRESIDENT: Order! Senator ARBIB: We have taken the concerns of employers seriously. They have been factored into the considerations and the consultation undertaken by Minister Shorten. We stand by the new body and believe the new body has the powers necessary to undertake the job to provide a tough cop on the beat and, at the same time, look at broader breaches that take place inside the industry. (Time expired)