Mr BURKE (Watson) (10:04): I seek leave to move the following motion: That the House— (1) notes: (a) on Monday, the Prime Minister guaranteed to the Australian people that "lower business taxes result in higher wages"; (b) on Tuesday, a secret survey of big business revealed that over 80 per cent of big businesses ruled out increasing wages or employing more Australians because of the Prime Minister's $65 billion handout; (c) that today, in the last half hour, a leaked draft of a statement from the Business Council of Australia reveals the commitments that big businesses were unwilling to give: (i) a commitment to "create more Australian jobs" was in the draft but deleted from the final statement; (ii) a commitment to "increase wages" was in the draft but deleted from the final statement; and (iii) a commitment to pay tax was in the draft but deleted from the final statement; and (d) the Prime Minister is still claiming his $65 billion handout to big business will create jobs and increase wages when even big business says it won't; and (2) therefore, calls on this out of touch Prime Minister to admit his $65 billion handout to big business is another example of this Government choosing the top end of town over ordinary Australians. Leave not granted. Mr BURKE: I move: That so much of the standing orders be suspended as would prevent the Member for Watson from moving the following motion immediately—That the House— (1) notes: (a) on Monday, the Prime Minister guaranteed to the Australian people that "lower business taxes result in higher wages"; (b) on Tuesday, a secret survey of big business revealed that over 80 per cent of big businesses ruled out increasing wages or employing more Australians because of the Prime Minister's $65 billion handout; (c) that today, in the last half hour, a leaked draft of a statement from the Business Council of Australia reveals the commitments that big businesses were unwilling to give: (i) a commitment to "create more Australian jobs" was in the draft but deleted from the final statement; (ii) a commitment to "increase wages" was in the draft but deleted from the final statement; and (iii) a commitment to pay tax was in the draft but deleted from the final statement; and (d) the Prime Minister is still claiming his $65 billion handout to big business will create jobs and increase wages when even big business says it won't; and (2) therefore, calls on this out of touch Prime Minister to admit his $65 billion handout to big business is another example of this Government choosing the top end of town over ordinary Australians. The Prime Minister has been caught out red-handed. Big business have made it clear what this handout is all about.