Mr TURNBULL (Wentworth—Prime Minister) (14:02): How is it fair to sell out low-paid workers at Clean Event and trade away their penalty rates? How is it fair to promise parents of disabled children that there is a National Disability Insurance Scheme and never fund it? How is it fair to go to an election with a financial plan that involved flinging $16½ billion of additional deficits and debt on the shoulders of Australians? The Labor Party has no concept of fairness. This is the party that claimed to be in favour of needs based funding. So eloquent was the Leader of the Opposition! He said only today, 'For me it's not about, in education, the government system or the non-government system; I believe in a sector-neutral approach which prioritises needs based funding,' and yet he delivered exactly the reverse. Ms Plibersek interjecting— The SPEAKER: The member for Sydney will cease interjecting. The Leader of the Opposition, on a point of order? Mr Shorten: On relevance: my question was specifically about the tax cuts that the government are giving to millionaires and the tax rises they are giving everyone else. Honourable members interjecting— The SPEAKER: Before I call the Prime Minister, I will address the point of order. Members on both sides will cease interjecting, or I will have to deal with them. I recognise that it is the day after the budget and I might have a busy day. The Leader of the Opposition is correct to say it was a very short question, but the Prime Minister is in order when he is referring to the concept of fairness. Mr Burke: On a point of order, Mr Speaker: the ruling that you— Ms Henderson interjecting— The SPEAKER: The member for Corangamite is warned! Mr Burke: Mr Speaker, the rulings that you have been making to date with respect to questions go to the topic area or policy area that we ask. If we are in a situation now where the adjective or the noun that we use to describe a policy opens up the entirety of government policy, where an impossible— The SPEAKER: The Manager of Opposition Business can resume his seat. Mr Pyne interjecting— The SPEAKER: The Leader of the House will cease interjecting. Mr Hunt interjecting— The SPEAKER: The Minister for Health is warned. I cannot stop members on both sides interjecting on each other, but, I tell you what, you are not going to interject on me. I have heard enough of the Manager of Opposition Business's point of order. That is not my intention. I have also referred to preambles as well, and the Prime Minister is part way through the answer. But I did not mean to leave the impression with him that I have come in here and announced a new ruling. I am listening to the Prime Minister. So far, I judge him, in comparing and contrasting, to be in order. Mr TURNBULL: There is nothing fairer than telling Australians the truth about the public finances of their country and ensuring, as we have in the budget, that there are the funds to deliver the National Disability Insurance Scheme and to be able to say to the parents of disabled children, 'The money is there,' and not as you did—you ranks of serried hypocrites, all of you—you never put the money in place. Dripping with empathy—hypocrites to the last degree. Honourable members interjecting— The SPEAKER: The Prime Minister will resume his seat. Members on both sides will cease interjecting. Mr Snowdon interjecting— The SPEAKER: The member for Lingiari is warned. The Manager of Opposition Business on a point of order. Mr Burke: Simply for the Prime Minister to direct his remarks through the chair. The SPEAKER: That is a very fair point of order. Mr TURNBULL: Mr Speaker, the opposition have perpetuated this myth that they are the party of empathy. They claim to be fair. They want to be fair to Australian students. Well, why don't they tell parents the truth? Why don't they tell them that they never implemented Gonski? They never delivered a needs-based system. They said they did but they didn't, and they know they didn't. They talked about the National Disability Insurance Scheme and never funded it; we have. We have delivered. We told the truth. We have brought the budget back into balance. The forecasts are stronger than ever. We have raised the money and made the tough decisions. This budget is fair. Labor has failed on fairness, just like the Leader of the Opposition failed the members of the Australian Workers' Union on fairness. This is a fair budget—one that delivers the opportunity and the security. And the only thing that matches the anxiety of the Leader of the Opposition is the energy of the member for Grayndler in the press gallery today. Government members interjecting— The SPEAKER: Members on my right are preventing me giving the call for the next question. I call the member for Gilmore.