Senator WATT (Queensland—Minister for Agriculture, Fisheries and Forestry and Minister for Emergency Management) (14:31): Thank you, Senator Pocock. As you stated, Senator Pocock, today the minister for infrastructure, Ms King, released the government's new infrastructure policy. What it's about more than anything is getting our infrastructure program into shape so it can actually be funded and actually be delivered. That's the case whether it be in the ACT, my home state of Queensland or anywhere else. We did see, Senator Pocock, over 10 years of coalition government, massive blow-outs of the infrastructure program. It was an infrastructure program that, under the coalition, expanded from about 150 projects to 800— Senator McKenzie: It's a 30 per cent cut to the regions. Senator WATT: which of course could not possibly have been delivered, with a blowout to the infrastructure budget of $33 billion. Senator Pocock, you have raised the question— Senator Davey: How do the Victorians like it? Senator WATT: about what it means for the ACT. As you've noted, Ms King has made the statement that there may be some provision for smaller jurisdictions which have funding constraints. Obviously, those kinds of details will need to be worked through with the particular jurisdictions, and I'd be happy to talk with you further about that as those details are ironed out. We know it pains the National Party, and that's why they're complaining now. All of those illusory projects that were never actually going to happen—they just looked really good on a spreadsheet, especially if they were coloured National Party green—were the flavour of the month, and in fact the decade, for the National Party. Do you know what? They were never going to be delivered. There was never the funding to deliver them and there were never the skills to deliver them. Now we have a government that's actually serious about delivering an infrastructure program—serious about investing in nationally significant infrastructure projects, whether they be in the ACT or anywhere else—rather than filling out spreadsheets with election commitments that could be made but were never, ever going to be delivered. The PRESIDENT: Senator Pocock, first supplementary?