Senator GALLAGHER (Australian Capital Territory—Minister for the Public Service, Minister for Finance, Minister for Women, Manager of Government Business in the Senate and Vice-President of the Executive Council) (14:21): Yes, I can. I thank Senator Smith for the question. Primary health care is in crisis. The shadow minister herself has said that our health system is in crisis at a number of levels, and she even went on to say, 'Perhaps we should have been more challenging in reform.' Opposition senators interjecting— Senator GALLAGHER: 'Woah, what does that mean?' A government senator: Who said that? Senator GALLAGHER: That was Senator Ruston, shadow minister for health. 'We should have been more challenging in reform.' Hmm, what does that mean? Co-payments? It might be! Cuts? It could be! They were the reforms that the government when you were in power sought to put in place. The crisis in primary health care is the product of deliberate decisions made by the former government. There is no person in Australia who bears more responsibility for this than the now Leader of the Opposition, a man voted by Australia's doctors as the worst health minister in a generation. It's a hard award to get, but he won it! The PRESIDENT: Senator Marielle Smith, a second supplementary?