Mr DUTTON (Dickson—Minister for Health and Minister for Sport) (14:55): Thank you very much, Madam Speaker, I did hear the question, yes. The SPEAKER: Then you have the call to answer. Mr DUTTON: I thank the member for O'Connor for the question. It is a very important question because it is about health services in Western Australia. The problem is that the Labor Party took money and put it into great big new bureaucracies in Canberra, 12 of them in total, and it really diminished the capacity to help patients that were in need in Western Australia and around the country. I have spoken about the GP Super Clinics Program on a couple of occasions now. When you look at the detail of what the member for Sydney claimed to be one of Labor's great successes, it really had many of the same attributes as other Labor Party public policy initiatives. The member for Sydney sits beside the member for McMahon. He was the master behind Fuelwatch and GroceryWatch. Other success stories— Ms King: Madam Speaker, on a point of order on direct relevance: he was asked a question about GP superclinics that are providing some three million services to people in our communities— The SPEAKER: The member will resume her seat. The Minister for Health has the call. Mr DUTTON: Just wandered out of the jungle? The war is over! GP superclinics have been a complete failure. You promised 64; in six years you only delivered 27—but wait to hear about this one at Cockburn. Honourable members interjecting— The SPEAKER: Order! There will be silence! The chamber has become positively unseemly. We will give the call to the member for Grayndler. Mr Albanese: Thank you, Madam Speaker. I am sure you were just about to intervene to draw the member's attention— The SPEAKER: I do not want commentary. The member will go straight to the point of order. Mr Albanese: The standing order breach is about personal aspersions on members. The minister opposite is a serial offender— The SPEAKER: The member will resume his seat. The minister will refer to people by their correct titles. Mr DUTTON: The Labor Party presided— The SPEAKER: And perhaps it would assist the House if you would withdraw the remark. Mr DUTTON: I would be happy to withdraw. Please allow me then to talk about other policy successes of the Rudd-Gillard years of which the member for Sydney is most proud. The National Rental Affordability Scheme: a great success! The member for Adelaide: a 10 per cent success rate in her program. The SPEAKER: The minister will refer to people by their correct titles. Mr Albanese: Madam Speaker— The SPEAKER: I presume that was your point of order? Mr Albanese: That could have been one of them, Madam Speaker! The SPEAKER: In that case you can resume your seat. Mr Albanese: He is in breach of most of them. My particular point of order was going to be about relevance: now he is not even talking about health. The SPEAKER: The minister will return to the question. Mr DUTTON: Certainly, Madam Speaker. I am asked about the Cockburn GP superclinic. This was promised in 2009. For those people unacquainted with this program, this was a government program where they put money into setting up clinics which were going to compete with existing GP clinics. The problem with this was, of course— Ms Rishworth interjecting— The SPEAKER: The member for Kingston will desist! Mr Champion interjecting— The SPEAKER: The member for Wakefield is warned! Mr DUTTON: It was a $6.65 million program. The first sod was turned two years later in October 2011. It still has not been constructed. Yet $6 million of that money has already been given to the project, but not one patient has been seen. Not one patient has been seen! It reminds me of other projects that the Labor Party has been associated with. Look at Centenary House, for arguments sake. It only took 17 months to construct and yet they cannot construct a superclinic within four or five years. (Time expired) Mr Albanese: Madam Speaker, I rise on a point of order. I am very concerned that the minister is defying your ruling now. The SPEAKER: There is no point of order. The Minister for Health's time has expired.