One of the core pillars of the Labor election campaign is the accusation the Government wants to privatise Medicare.
The party even enlisted former ALP prime minister Bob Hawke to level the accusation in an election advertisement.
But Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull has ruled out making any changes to Medicare and says Mr Shorten is waging a “scare campaign” based on a “disgraceful lie”.
What do the leaders say?
“Medicare will never ever, ever be privatised. It’s a core government service and every element of Medicare, every aspect of Medicare that is delivered by government today will continue to be delivered by government in the future, full stop.”
Malcolm Turnbull (18/06/2016)
“The Liberals are trying to pull-off the biggest fraud of this campaign, and there is some competition for that title. They’re pretending their taskforce doesn’t exist and that now privatising Medicare isn’t part of their plans.”
Bill Shorten (19/06/2016)
How did we get here?
Labor has been waging this war throughout the campaign, but concerns over the future of Medicare were diagnosed months before.
Federal Health Minister Sussan Ley was forced to defend a taskforce set up within her department to modernise the Medicare payment system.
In June, Treasurer Scott Morrison released the terms of reference for a wide-ranging Productivity Commission inquiry into reforming the Department of Human Services.
Part of that was to investigate “services within the human services sector that are best suited to the introduction of greater competition, contestability and user choice,” and look at overseas examples.