Mr TURNBULL (Wentworth—Prime Minister) (14:01): The honourable member will be aware that, under the Quality Schools package that is part of this budget, government schools in New South Wales will have total funding over 10 years of $31 billion, an 83 per cent increase in funding over 10 years. The question for the honourable member and her colleagues is: do they actually have a schools policy at all? She says she has 27 contradictory and secret deals. Government members interjecting— Mr TURNBULL: Funny money—Monopoly money, $22 billion she was not prepared to commit to only a few days ago. What we have done is fully implement the Gonski recommendations of nationally consistent needs based funding. Opposition members interjecting— Mr TURNBULL: Honourable members complain. Certainly David Gonski was there when we announced it. He endorsed it, because he knows that what the Labor Party did was to corrupt his recommendations. They did not deliver the model that he provided at all. The reality is this: we are committing an additional $18.6 billion to schools over the decade, a 75 per cent increase right across the nation, across government and non-government schools, and we are bringing them to this— The SPEAKER: The Prime Minister will resume his seat. The member for Sydney on a point of order—and she will state the point of order. Ms Plibersek: Yes, Mr Speaker. It is on relevance, because there is an email and letter that— The SPEAKER: The member for Sydney will resume her seat. The Prime Minister is being relevant to the question. Ms Plibersek: I seek leave to table this— The SPEAKER: No, you cannot seek leave to table when you have risen on a point of order. You can seek leave to table at the conclusion of the answer. Mr TURNBULL: We are delivering over the decade a 75 per cent increase in funding. We are delivering for government schools 20 per cent of the Schooling Resource Standard right across the nation, because of course for these government schools the primary funder is the state or territory government. For non-government schools, we are delivering 80 per cent of the Schooling Resource Standard, adjusted in accordance with their SES and, of course, added to with loadings for various matters: disabilities, low-socioeconomic background, English as a second language, Indigeneity and so forth. So it is a very thorough model. The question for the Labor Party is this: if they say more money needs to be expended, are they saying that the federal government should pay a larger share of government schools' costs or of non-government schools' costs? Are they saying the Schooling Resource Standard is not high enough or the loadings are not high enough? It has got to be one of those. Ms Catherine King interjecting— Mr TURNBULL: So Labor needs a policy. Twenty-seven secret deals, 27 secret betrayals of Gonski's vision, is not a policy; it is an embarrassment. The SPEAKER: Before I call the member for Sydney, the member for Ballarat is warned. I understand the member for Sydney is seeking leave to table a document. Ms Plibersek: I am, Mr Speaker. I am seeking leave to table this email that went to every principal in New South Wales saying, 'You can't trust the Liberals on education.' Leave not granted.