House debates
Wednesday, 19 September 2018
Questions without Notice
Economy
2:04 pm
Scott Morrison (Cook, Liberal Party, Prime Minister) Share this | Hansard source
I thank the member for Leichhardt for his question. Our government is standing with the families of Australia to ensure that the essential services that they rely on are guaranteed—not by words, but by running a strong economy—to ensure that the economy continues to grow and Australians are in work and can support and provide the services, whether they're Medicare, whether they're affordable medicine or whether they're record schools and hospitals funding. These are supported by a government that knows how to run a strong economy and knows how to keep the financials of this country under control.
We believe that Australians should keep more of what they earn, and we believe that Australian families should keep more of what they earn. That's why we have legislated, opposed by those opposite, personal income tax relief right across the board: $144 billion worth of personal tax relief to Australians right across the board, which the Labor Party wants to cut in half, by $70 billion. We are focused and have legislated that tax relief, which has already commenced. We're backing family businesses, with lower taxes for small and family businesses. We're getting Australians into work, particularly young Australians. More than 100,000 jobs were created in the last financial year for young people getting into work. Australian families celebrate those successes for their young people, and that's been achieved by the hard work of Australian businesses who have been giving young people a go under our policies.
Our plans to get electricity prices down will be supporting families across Australia. The Labor Party's plan on electricity prices is to put them up by $1,400 per household by increasing the emissions reduction target from 26 per cent to 45 per cent—and, more than that, they'll make it law. They will legislate for higher electricity prices if they ever come to government.
And record schools funding, protecting children online—today we have taken strong action, and I will welcome the strong support from the opposition, which I know will be forthcoming, to take action on the concerns of Australian families about the contamination of food, in particular strawberries, in what is basically an act of absolute idiocy on the Australian people, on Australian families. We're taking action on that by increasing the penalties for those engaged in this food tampering. We're taking action on that by introducing a new provision on recklessness that means that any idiot who wants to go into a grocery store or a fruit and veg store and stick pins in fruit will face penalties of up to 10 years in prison. We want that bill done and out of this parliament before we rise and go from this place, and I thank the opposition for their support for achieving that. We're taking action with $1 million extra, supporting what has been done in Queensland, and I commend the Queensland government for doing that through its support for the industry and food standards. This weekend, support our strawberry farmers: make a pav.
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