Ms BELL (Moncrieff) (16:15): Again, we hear the colourful language and the huff and puff from the member for Bruce and other members on the other side. We hear giggling and laughter from the Labor Party on this important topic here today. We hear slurs of former prime ministers of this great country. We hear spin and we hear insults. That's we hear from them. We don't hear about a plan. There's no alternative plan on the other side of the House to tell Australians how you run our great nation. Why is that? Australians have the right to ask you that question. It's because you don't have one. You don't have the experience that it takes to run this country in a once-in-a-hundred-year pandemic. The DEPUTY SPEAKER: The member for Moncrieff will pause for the moment. Is the member for Shortland making a point of order? Mr Conroy: Yes. The member's reflecting on 'you'. I ask that she direct her comments through the chair. She's saying 'you' don't have a plan. The DEPUTY SPEAKER: Thanks to the member for Shortland. Continue on. Ms BELL: Thank you. I appreciate that input. So I say to the Australian people: the Labor Party doesn't have a plan. Thank you for clarifying that. I think it's very, very important, because I want to highlight to Australians and compare in contrast what the Morrison government has done to support Australians during a once-in-a-hundred-year pandemic. As a nation, we haven't been under this much pressure since World War II. Australians know that. Being elected by the Australian people to steward our way through this pandemic is an absolute privilege. It's a privilege. It's a bastion of trust, and it's posed many difficult positions and decisions to keep Australians safe and to keep Australians in jobs. They're called key performance indicators. That's what the Australian people should judge this government on, not spin and slur and unparliamentary language and stage-managed appearances to demean the Prime Minister's character. I would urge Australians not to listen to those opposite, not to listen to their hate speech and not to listen to their hypocrisy. If you vote Labor once— Mr Conroy: I rise on a point of order. The speaker has reflected on members of the opposition by arguing that we engage in hate speech. That is most unparliamentary. The DEPUTY SPEAKER: The member will resume his seat. The member for Moncrieff will continue on. Ms BELL: I tell the Australian people that, if they vote once for Labor, they will pay for it for the next 10 years. That is fact. At the federal election that we're facing in May, they'll pay for it for longer. I want to ask Australians not to be fooled by those opposite. Don't be fooled by their bluff, their huff and puff, their flip-flop from one side to the other. They don't have the experience required to make the incredibly difficult decisions that our Prime Minister and cabinet make every single day for the good of our nation. I'm going to outline some of those thousands of decisions that I'm talking about that our cabinet and our Prime Minister are making for both sides of the political divide, for all Australians, not to appease one group over another—thousands of decisions every day. We've delivered a AAA credit rating for Australia, for our nation. Can a member from the other side tell me another nation that's done that? We've had $30 billion in tax cuts and unemployment at record lows of 4.2 per cent, heading towards something with a three in front of it. When did the Labor Party last see that number? When was it? It was so long ago I can't remember it, and I'm heading towards 53. There are 1.7 million more jobs. Youth unemployment is at less than 10 per cent—the lowest since 2008. One million more women are in jobs. These are the key performance indicators that I'm asking Australians to judge our government and our Prime Minister on. I'm asking Australians not to get distracted by the personal attacks on our Prime Minister's character that we've seen this week. There are 220,000 trade apprentices in training. We have affordable, reliable electricity. We have lower emissions. Those opposite, let's remember, rely on the Greens to form government. (Time expired)