Senator CHRIS EVANS (Western Australia—Minister for Tertiary Education, Skills, Science and Research and Leader of the Government in the Senate) (15:00): I think that the senator may have missed the key point: we are actually getting on with it. We are doing it. We are actually doing it! And interestingly, we are doing it with the cooperation of many state premiers. I think that the Liberal opposition in this chamber wants to show that this is possible and that they can support it: let us see you commit to funding it. Let us see you be honest and say, 'I am not just going to wear the T-shirt, I am not just going to say yes to everybody when they ask me the question: I am going to be honest with them and say, "This is how much I will put on the table. This is how much the Liberal Party will put on the table."' Senator Fifield: Mr President, I rise on a point of order, on relevance. My question to the minister was whether the government is prepared to accept the hand of bipartisanship and whether the minister is prepared to convey to the Prime Minister again the request that there be a joint committee established to oversee the implementation; not a talkfest, but to oversee the implementation. The PRESIDENT: Order! There is no point of order; I believe that the minister is answering the question. The minister has 26 seconds left if he has anything further. Senator CHRIS EVANS: I think it should be clear to people that we are dealing with the people who have some relevance: the state governments have some relevance because they are making a financial commitment, not just mouthing platitudes. We will continue to work with those who show real commitment to the scheme, and I suggest that the senator spend his time talking to the Premier of Queensland, Mr Newman, about whether he is prepared to support the scheme. That would be a useful use of his time. (Time expired) Senator Chris Evans: Mr President, I ask that further questions be placed on the Notice Paper.