Mr MORRISON (Cook—Treasurer) (14:44): I thank the member for the question and I thank the Prime Minister for the opportunity to respond. Mr Champion interjecting— The SPEAKER: The member for Wakefield will leave under 94(a). The member for Wakefield then left the chamber. Mr MORRISON: Those opposite seem to want to give large public companies a leg up, because the measure as it is being put forward, and sponsored and promoted by those opposite, will allow large public companies to be able to scrutinise the financial matters of these private companies and be able to reverse engineer the negotiating position that they would be able to walk into a negotiating room with and deal with those large companies. So I do not understand why the member would want to give Coles, Woolies, BHP or any of these other companies the opportunity to give them a leg up in a negotiating position. Opposition members interjecting— The SPEAKER: The member for Fraser. Mr MORRISON: They either want to back big business in that way—to be able to put one over on smaller business when they are negotiating these things—or, the alternative is that they just do not have a clue.