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) (14:17): I thank Senator Canavan for the question. Again, I think there is an obvious reason why they don't want to talk about the change that we have brought forward on tax—the change that the parliament will be considering, the one that the House has been considering and, indeed, the one that you have adopted. And, by adopting that policy, you have accepted that it was the right thing to do—to change our position; that it was a fairer way of applying those tax cuts; that it got to more people—bigger tax cuts to more people, and everybody gets a tax cut. You have accepted that as your policy and, in doing so, you now want to talk about everything that we are not doing. The Prime Minister has fronted up and he has explained to the Australian people why he has changed his mind and why the government have changed our minds. It is to ensure that the tax cuts reach more people and that the average taxpayer gets a much bigger tax cut, that 90 per cent of women get a bigger tax cut when they're paying tax and that a hundred per cent of women taxpayers get a tax cut. And you want to talk about other things. We have a full book of tax reform. How about you work with us— Opposition senators interjecting— Senator GALLAGHER: Yes, on super. You find us. You work with us on super, on PRRT, on multinational— Honourable senators interjecting— The PRESIDENT: Minister Gallagher, please resume your seat. I'm waiting for the chamber to come to order. Senator McGrath. Senator McGrath: I would ask the minister to table the full book on tax reform. The PRESIDENT: Senator McGrath, please resume your seat. Minister, please continue. Senator GALLAGHER: You opposite are an absolute rabble. If that's the best you can do—an absolute rabble—to channel one of our former colleagues. The tax reforms we have brought to this parliament that you refuse to deal with are the reforms that the government have on our agenda. That is what they are. You want to talk about all the things we are not doing—that are not proposals by this government. The PRESIDENT: Senator Canavan, first supplementary?