House debates

Wednesday, 8 April 2020

Questions without Notice

Covid-19

2:06 pm

Photo of Scott MorrisonScott Morrison (Cook, Liberal Party, Prime Minister) Share this | Hansard source

I thank the member for Bass for her question and for her leadership in her community during this crisis we face, as well as acknowledge all members in this House for the strong leadership they're showing in their local communities at this difficult time. Over the past 11 weeks, since we first declared the coronavirus as a disease of pandemic potential, we have been putting in place the key protections and supports that will be necessary for Australia to combat the virus and to combat, withstand and cushion the significant impact that will flow as a result of the economic consequences of the virus.

We have navigated our way together through these early stages and set up a national baseline of these supports right across the country. That has been done not just through the actions of the federal government, of course, but through the strong, coordinated leadership that has been exhibited through the national cabinet, the premiers and chief ministers and all of their state and territory governments. We now have in place one of the strongest testing regimes of any country in the world. We have been flattening the curve, reducing the rate of daily growth from over 20 per cent to what is now an average of around two per cent. We are boosting the ICU capacity and getting access to those critical supplies that the member for McMahon was just asking about, and we will see ICU capacity treble. The time that we have bought in the way we have flattened the curve with the measures we've put in place, particularly when it comes to social distancing and other restrictions in the community that have been accepted and adapted to by the Australian community, has been nothing short of phenomenal, and we thank them for their cooperation.

Federally, whether it's been the private hospital guarantee; the work we've done on accessing respirators and testing facilities, and engaging with other countries—I was speaking to the President of Korea only yesterday about these issues and the Secretary of State from the United States this morning—the telehealth facilities; the aged-care workforce; the search for a vaccine; the metal health support—some $6.3 billion worth of health related measures—is all buying us valuable time. Whether it's been protecting the vulnerable through the $123 million to support Indigenous communities; the $200 million for emergency relief; the support for delivering meals to the elderly; the $150 million for domestic violence initiatives—particularly through programs such as 1800RESPECT—cybersecurity and e-safety supports, because we have so many more Australians, particularly children, online who are vulnerable; support through our disability services; the economic lifeline that has been provided through doubling of the jobseeker arrangements with the supplement; the $130 JobKeeper program; the mandatory code to support tenants through their leases; the childcare arrangements, which are free to Australians who particularly need it, this is all buying us valuable time, time that will enable us to work through this crisis to the other side and beyond.

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