Senator WONG (South Australia—Minister for Foreign Affairs and Leader of the Government in the Senate) (14:07): I will first also acknowledge the honourable speaker Seoule and welcome you to Australia. We're very pleased to have our friends from Vanuatu with us today. If we're a little feisty, you'll understand this is the robust Australian democracy, Mr Speaker! President, senators and Senator Grogan, I would say to you that what we see from 1 July are tax cuts. There's a tax cut for every taxpayer in Australia—13.6 million Australians, 2.9 million low-paid workers, many of whom are people who supported the coalition. They must be scratching their heads wondering why it is that the coalition are so opposed to so many of the cost-of-living measures that the government has put in place. Of course, there is the tax cut for every Australian taxpayer, not just some. On top of that there's the $300 energy bill relief for every Australian household and $325 for small businesses. Remember when they were the party of small business? There's a freeze on the cost of PBS medicines for every Australian and a third consecutive pay rise for 2.6 million workers—they're not excited about that because they believe in low wages as a deliberate design feature of the Australian economy. On top of that, there's more funding to build more homes and an increase to paid parental leave on top of cheaper child care, fee-free TAFE and the biggest investment ever in expanding bulk-billing. Opposition senators interjecting— Senator WONG: They're more interested in shouting at the Labor Party than actually looking at what the people who vote for them want, which is relief for the cost of living. You would think that Senator Birmingham might be excited about or interested in all the people in South Australia who will benefit from this policy. (Time expired) The PRESIDENT: Senator Grogan, first supplementary?