Mr ALBANESE (Grayndler—Prime Minister) (14:06): I thank the Deputy Leader of the Opposition for her question. It is true that I do not live in regional Australia. I live in Australia's largest inland city—the one we are in right now, Canberra. It's true that, like the Deputy Leader of the Opposition, all of us in this chamber live a life of relative privilege, compared with the people that we represent. That is right. It's precisely why we need to do whatever we can to look after people and to address cost-of-living pressures. It's why the 60-day dispensing is aimed precisely at that and precisely at making sure that, instead of having to go twice to the pharmacy—once on day 30 and once on day 60—you go once. If you go once, you are cutting the price literally in half as well as taking pressure off the medical system by having fewer journeys to the doctor. Ms Ley interjecting— The SPEAKER: The Acting Leader of the Opposition has asked the question. The Prime Minister will be heard in silence as she was heard in silence when she asked the question. Mr ALBANESE: I was pleased yesterday to read a press release from the shadow health minister. I thought that the party that have been obsessed with saying no to everything were about to have a kumbaya moment and say something positive. It began: The Coalition strongly supports Australians having access to cheaper medicines. Excellent! Then it went on to say in the very next sentence: We support 60-day dispensing. I thought: 'This is going well. That's the way.' Then I read the next word: 'However, even though we support it all, we're against it. And what we'll do is we'll put a disallowance motion in the Senate. We'll hold a press conference with all the drama—the Nats and the Libs out there—and we're going to knock it over tomorrow.' Do you know what they did in the Senate earlier today? They lost six votes trying to block the vote being held on their motion. Then, when that all failed, they withdrew the moving of the motion. Now it sits on the Notice Paper as an orphan. No-one's moving it. No-one's associated with it. What a farce!