Mr MORRISON (Cook—Treasurer) (14:23): I thank the member for his question. For constituents like Alan, it is incredibly important that we have a tax design in this system that doesn't go and steal the tax refunds of hardworking Australians. Opposition members interjecting— Mr MORRISON: I notice the interjections of those opposite, who say he hasn't paid any tax. Alan has paid tax all of his life, you muppet. He's paid tax all of his life. Beaker over here— Honourable members interjecting— The SPEAKER: Members on both sides! Mr Morrison: They have just shown the tell, Mr Speaker. Alan has worked hard all of his life and he has put a nest egg together and he is now a victim, like another 850,000-plus Australians, of what Labor would propose to do by abolishing commonsense, good principles of tax design. And pensioners are not immune either, as the Prime Minister has reminded us. Ms Owens interjecting— The SPEAKER: The member for Parramatta is warned. Mr MORRISON: Pensioners will be hit if they dare to want to manage their own superannuation funds and not be extorted into putting it into industry funds with Labor mates, like the Leader of the Opposition wants to demand of them. Alan should get the same tax benefit, the same tax relief, as every other Australian for the tax paid by the company he's invested in. Ms Husar interjecting— The SPEAKER: The member for Lindsay is warned. Mr MORRISON: What we have learnt again about the shadow Treasurer today is he has a capacity for stuffing up like no-one in this place. Honourable members interjecting— Mr MORRISON: The shadow Treasurer has completely muffed this one, and we're used to it. I'm particularly used to it. In the Rudd-Gillard-Rudd government this bloke was the prince of failure amongst a royal family of failures on that side, which has no limit. We know, as the Prime Minister reminded us, about GroceryWatch, Fuelwatch and the employee share ownership schemes. They were the warm-up for the worst immigration minister we have ever seen in this country. Honourable members interjecting— Mr MORRISON: He is the worst of all time: 25,000 turned up on illegal boats on your watch; $5 billion in budget blowouts. Do not let this shadow Treasurer do to the economy what he did to our borders. Dr Mike Kelly: Better take your medication! The SPEAKER: I heard that interjection. I'm not sure who it was from. It needs to be withdrawn immediately. Did the member for Eden-Monaro make an unparliamentary remark? Dr Mike Kelly: I withdraw. The SPEAKER: Just before I call the Deputy Leader of the Opposition— Opposition members interjecting— The SPEAKER: The Deputy Leader of the Opposition might want to resume her seat, because her colleagues behind her seem intent on delaying proceedings. Mr Chester interjecting— The SPEAKER: I'm just going to say very briefly: the Minister for Veterans' Affairs is warned. I'm not going to have people continue conversations when I'm trying to address the House. The level of interjections was again ridiculously high. I'm not going to address this point at length. There were so many loud interjections I'm giving a general warning. I am going to remove people from the House, whether they are serial offenders or not. The level of noise is ridiculously high: I can't hear the minister's answer and on occasion can't hear the questions as well. A number of people have been warned already a number of times. If they interject at all they'll be out. The Deputy Leader of the Opposition.