Mr ALBANESE (Grayndler—Prime Minister) (15:10): I thank the member for Casey for his question. He should be pretty enthusiastic about the government making the decision to look after low- and middle-income earners, because in his electorate 87 per cent of his electorate will get a bigger tax cut—87 per cent! And every single one, 100 per cent, will get a tax cut—100 per cent! He asked a question about the government changing its position, and, yes, we have, because economic circumstances have changed. But you've changed your position. You now say you are going to vote against the Morrison tax cuts. That's what you're going to do, or maybe you're going to go back to saying that you'll roll it back. You couldn't make this up, Mr Speaker. They need to make up their minds. Ms Ley: A hundred times! Mr ALBANESE: You can either come in here and say you are— The SPEAKER: Order! The Deputy Leader of the Opposition! Ms Ley: We've got a better plan. The SPEAKER: Order! There is far too much noise on my left. The member for Casey was heard in silence. The same courtesy is going to be shown to the Prime Minister or people will leave. The Prime Minister has the call. Mr ALBANESE: Thanks, Mr Speaker. There are two options here. One is— Mr Ted O'Brien: The truth? The SPEAKER: Order! The— Mr Ted O'Brien: Don't you like that option? The SPEAKER: The member for Fairfax will leave the chamber under 94(a). The member for Fairfax then left the chamber. Mr ALBANESE: One is that those opposite can say that the Morrison tax cuts should be kept: they come in here, they vote against it—our changes—and they promise to roll it back. The second is that they agree with us that our package is better. If our package isn't better, why are they saying they're going to vote for it? Mr Speaker, the member for Casey wasn't a part of the last circus that we've seen out there on Nemesis for the last couple weeks. Some people asked me last night why, of all the Jack Nicholson movies, I picked The Shining. Well, it couldn't be A Few Good Men— Honourable members interjecting— Mr ALBANESE: and it certainly couldn't be Terms of Endearment! Honourable members interjecting— The SPEAKER: Order! The Prime Minister will pause while the House comes to order. Mr Burns: No career in comedy after this, Albo! The SPEAKER: The member for Macnamara will cease interjecting. Mr Pasin interjecting— The SPEAKER: Member for Barker, I'm trying to hear from the member for Wannon. If you could assist me, it would be appreciated. Mr Tehan: My point of order goes to relevance. You can't handle the truth, and that's what the question was about. Honourable members interjecting— The SPEAKER: Resume your seat. Resume your seat and keep walking out of the chamber. Opposition members interjecting— The SPEAKER: Order! This is question time, not the Academy Awards. The Prime Minister has the call, and he's going to be heard in silence. Mr ALBANESE: Our changes are so bad that they're going to vote for them! Nemesis is like a reboot of Fight Club, except on Fight Club no-one could talk about it. But they can't talk about anything else but fighting themselves. They can't talk about anything else. The fact is they have no credibility. If they want credibility and to defend their position, they need to do what the Deputy Leader of the Opposition did and roll back these changes.