Senator McKENZIE (Victoria—Minister for Agriculture and Leader of The Nationals in the Senate) (14:45): Thank you, Senator McDonald, for your question. The Morrison-McCormack government believes that every Australian child, no matter where they live, should be able to access a world-class education, and that's why we're providing record funding for child care, at $8.6 billion rising to $9.9 billion, in childcare centres from Bamaga in the north to Dover in Tassie's south. That's why we're providing record funding for schools: $310 billion over 10 years, an increase of 62 per cent per student. And that's why we're providing record funding for universities: over $17 billion this year alone. We need to ensure that we've got the policies and strategies in place to ensure that all Australians can reach their potential, irrespective of their geography. It's why our government instigated the Halsey review, which actually formed part of the $152 million regional student access to education package to improve opportunities for those young people who live outside capital cities. Since 2016, the Liberals and the Nationals have committed more than half a billion dollars in new funding to improve regional higher education facilities and places, regional university centres, and income support and scholarships for rural kids, and we're not done. At the National Press Club, Dan Tehan, the education minister, released the NAPLAN review, with 33 recommendations about how we, as a government and a country, can ensure that country kids can access higher education at the same rate as their city cousins. It is not because they lack the potential. It is because of cultural issues around lack of aspiration; it's about achievement, which goes to the provision of quality services, right from child care through to our state school systems in regional country towns; and it is about access: whether they need financial support to study in capital city universities or whether they can access that right there at home. The PRESIDENT: Order, Senator McKenzie. Senator McDonald, a supplementary question?