Ms RISHWORTH (Kingston—Minister for Social Services) (14:56): I thank the member for the question, because there has been a lot of rhetoric heard in the debate from the shadow minister, and also in the debate last night, but not a lot of evidence. The evidence is very clear. Mr Sukkar interjecting— Ms RISHWORTH: It was laid out in the ANAO report, and I remind the House— Honourable members interjecting— Ms RISHWORTH: I remind the House that the government did not demonstrate— The SPEAKER: Order! The minister will resume her seat. Questions have been heard in silence. Answers will be heard in silence. This is question time, and it is answer time as well. Ms RISHWORTH: I remind the House that the government was not able to demonstrate that the CDC program was meeting its intended objectives. That is from the ANAO report. But I continued reading the ANAO report and I found some other interesting information, in table 1.2. It is that in 2020 the former government reduced the objectives of the act. It actually references violence and harm and the reduction in trial sites. That was point b). It actually removed that from the objectives. So, in the new objectives, there was no reference to trying to determine whether violence or harm was reducing. The SPEAKER: Order! The minister will pause. Mr Sukkar: Point of order, Mr Speaker, on relevance. The question was: will the Prime Minister, or the minister in his stead, promise that there won't be more violence inflicted on women and children as a result of putting— The SPEAKER: The member will resume his seat. The minister is being completely relevant in referring to the program and the ANAO report regarding the outcomes. I give the call to the minister, who will be heard in silence. Ms RISHWORTH: In 2015, the former government was then interested in whether or not the cashless debit card reduced violence or harm in the trial areas, but by 2020 they were no longer interested. Why? You might wonder. It is because they could not provide any evidence to suggest there was a reduction in harm and violence in communities. We've heard a lot from those on the other side about the University of Adelaide report, and I want to go to the part of the report that talks about safety, crime and family violence, where it said that 60 per cent of CDC participants reported that they did not feel safer since the introduction of the CDC card and 28 per cent— Mr Pasin interjecting— The SPEAKER: The member for Barker will cease interjecting. Ms RISHWORTH: that's more than one in four participants—reported their safety had reduced since the introduction of the CDC. So, if we go to the evidence and ignore the ideological rhetoric from those opposite, we see that this program did not make a difference when it came to safety and harm. Indeed, what it did for participants was make discrimination normalised in communities and stigma normalised in communities, and it had practical problems that meant that people couldn't buy a second-hand fridge, because they didn't have enough cash. It meant that families couldn't take their children to the football, because they didn't have enough cash. This has meant real problems in communities, and we are acting to fix it. The SPEAKER: I give the call to the member for Bruce. Honourable members interjec ting— The SPEAKER: The member for Bruce will be heard in silence.