Mr MORRISON (Cook—Prime Minister) (14:24): Cabinet processes I wouldn't go into in a public forum such as this. But what I would make very clear is that the government has not made a decision in relation to the recognition of Jerusalem as the capital of Israel. The government has not made a decision on that. What I simply said was that I was persuaded by the arguments that were made by the former ambassador to Israel from Australia, Dave Sharma, about the case he was putting forward and that we would be posing that question and that we would be consulting on that question with a view, down the track, to making a decision. And we will follow the full process that would be necessary to go through to come to a decision on that matter. The opposition doesn't seem to understand the difference between a decision of a government and a question that is being posed. That is the clear distinction that has been made. The Leader of the Opposition and the Deputy Leader of the Opposition raise questions in relation to what can be expected in the future. I can tell you what can be expected in the future if the Labor leader becomes the Prime Minister of this country: $200 billion of reckless taxes on the Australian economy. He won't stand up to big electricity companies. He won't take a big stick to electricity companies to ensure that customers get the right deal from electricity companies. He won't do that, but he will take a big stick to the house prices of Australians. We've had 100,000 young home buyers and other home buyers get back into the market in the last year, the best result we've seen in eight years. Ms Ryan interjecting— The SPEAKER: The member for Lalor! Mr MORRISON: What he wants to do to every single one of those is take a big stick to their house prices with the reckless tax that he wants to impose by abolishing negative gearing as we know it and increasing capital gains tax by 50 per cent. The Labor Party have form on reckless taxes, and they can impose them at the worst possible time—if there's ever a good time. Ms Ryan interjecting— The SPEAKER: The member for Lalor is warned. Mr MORRISON: But it was the member for Lilley, when he was Treasurer, who decided it was a cracking idea to apply a mining tax just as the mining industry was turning and to accelerate it and accelerate its decline. And now the Labor Party think it's a cracking idea to attack home owners by applying a big fat tax on housing as the housing market has softened. What you can expect from the Labor Party in the future, if they were to occupy these benches, is a tax on home owners, with higher taxes; a tax on retirees, with higher taxes; a tax on wage earners, with higher and reckless taxes on them—a tax on retirees who had the simple strategy of owning Australian shares so they would live off the dividend imputation credits, which they are entitled to, because Australians shouldn't have to pay tax twice.