Senator CORMANN (Western Australia—Leader of the Government in the Senate, Minister for Finance, Special Minister of State and Vice-President of the Executive Council) (14:01): As I've advised the chamber for some time, somebody earning $30,000 a year will get a 8.3 per cent tax cut and somebody earning $200,000 a year will get a 0.2 per cent tax cut. Colleagues, do you know what I'm going to say? The Labor Party does not know when the battle is over. The battle is over and the working families of Australia have won. Senator Wong interjecting— Senator CORMANN: Yes, there's an election. I take that interjection from the Leader of the Opposition in the Senate. We can't wait to engage with the Labor Party in the lead-up to the next election all the way to election day next year when the Labor Party is saying to working families around Australia, 'We, the Labor Party, stand for higher taxes,' while we, the Liberal-National Party, stand for lower taxes. You stand for lower growth; we stand for stronger growth. You stand for fewer jobs; we stand for more jobs. You stand for lower wages; we stand for higher wages. Your agenda of higher taxes and your agenda of wanting to increase the tax burden on Australian families by $70 billion will hurt the economy, will hurt families and, of course, will cost jobs. We're quite happy to go to the next election with you promising to increase that— The PRESIDENT: Senator Wong, on a point of order? Senator Wong: It's all very interesting, but, really, the question was quite clear. It was on the comparison between someone on $200,000 and someone on $90,000. The PRESIDENT: This is the reason I need silence when questions are asked; it's so that I may hear them. I can't instruct the minister how to answer the question, but I remind all ministers that all material in the answer must be directly relevant to the question. Senator CORMANN: As I've advised the chamber now on a number of occasions, the value of the tax cut for somebody earning $90,000, which the Senate has just legislated, is 2.9 per cent for every year over the next four years. It is 0.2 per cent every year over the next four years for somebody earning $200,000. The PRESIDENT: Senator Keneally, a supplementary question.