Mr MORRISON (Cook—Prime Minister and Minister for the Public Service) (15:07): I thank the member for his question. The matter that the member is referring to is still a matter that the government is consulting on and preparing for legislation, and that's a matter that's under consideration right now. I'm asked, though, about banking revenue by a member of the Labor Party. I remember that the member for Hunter was a member of the government that introduced the mining tax—the mining tax that didn't raise any revenue at all. But guess what they did with all the revenue that never came in the door? They spent it all. Even when they tax a lot and spend a lot, they can never get it right. And that is why the Labor Party when they were in government sent our budget into fiscal ruin. But this year—2019-20—the Treasurer brought down a budget in April which puts our budget in surplus for the first time in 12 years. And I'll tell you why: it is because we know how to manage money. We know how to manage our spending and we know how to manage our revenue. And we know how to ensure that Australians keep more of what they earn while we can keep a budget strong that can invest in the essential services Australians can rely on. So we can invest in record levels of hospital funding. We can invest in record levels of education and schools funding. We can invest in important mental health programs. We can fully fund the National Disability Insurance Scheme and we can ensure that all the PBS medicines recommended can be listed. We know what happened under Labor: when they ran out of money, they couldn't list those medicines. I'm honestly not going to take seriously a question from a Labor Party member who used to be a member of a government that came to this despatch box and announced the four surpluses that never happened. That's why the Australian people will never trust the Labor Party with money. You can't trust Labor with money, because, when they run out of their own, they always come after yours.