Mr MORRISON (Cook—Prime Minister and Minister for the Public Service) (14:30): I am asked about why the government has increased the debt at this time. That was the question I was just asked. I was asked about child care, and I have given answers already about child care— Opposition members interjecting— The SPEAKER: Members on my left, I am about to start ejecting people. As is the case with so many questions, there was more than one question asked. If you want the Prime Minister or a minister to focus on the question you deem most important, don't ask more than one in the question. Mr MORRISON: I was asked about child care. Under our policy, 84 per cent of families are not impacted by the caps in our policy, and the threshold kicks in at about $350,000 a year for a family. They're the caps that kicked in for our policy. Our policy is means tested. That is our policy that we put in place, and it saw childcare costs come down since then. But I'm asked why we have made the investments that we have. The Leader of the Opposition often makes this point. I will tell you why we have invested at this time: because there is a COVID-19 pandemic that has stripped jobs and livelihoods—and, in many cases, lives—away from Australians. This might be a mystery to the Leader of the Opposition. I've heard how he talks about the recession. If you don't understand how the country got into recession, then you don't have a clue about how to get out of it. That is the failing of this Leader of the Opposition. This Leader of the Opposition walks around this country as if there has never been a pandemic. The SPEAKER: The Manager of Opposition business? Mr Burke: I have a point of order on direct relevance. I think it is a pretty long bow to have him still in order at this point. The SPEAKER: You might think that, but I do take very careful note of the questions. I take my own notes, and if you think I heard something different, now is the time to stand up, but what I've got here is: 'Why did the Prime Minister rack up a trillion of Liberal debt, and talk about the Morrison recession.' So, if it's in the question, you can't really expect me to insist that it not be referred to. Mr MORRISON: This is why the Australian public do not trust the Labor Party, when it comes to whether times are good or times are bad. Times are difficult at the moment, and the budget that was handed down by the Treasurer was the budget that Australians need, and it is a budget for all Australians. It's a budget that has given Australians hope and has given Australians confidence. It is a budget that says that Australians should be able to keep more of what they earn, and that businesses who are going to employ people, particularly young people—who have been hit four times harder through this pandemic recession, and we need to get them back into work as quickly as possible. But still the Labor Party baulk at that. The Leader of the Labor Party will have it each way on every single issue, and that's why the Australian people don't trust him. Even those on his own side don't trust him. He can't go to Queensland; they won't have him up there. And the member for Hunter won't travel all the way from Maitland to Newcastle to stand behind the— The SPEAKER: The Prime Minister is now straying from the question.