Prime Minister Tony Abbott is confident he can get controversial budget measures through parliament. Source: AAP
PRIME Minister Tony Abbott has told the states they must accept there are "swings and roundabouts" when it comes to federal money.
Angry state and territory leaders have organised a meeting for this Sunday in Sydney to discuss the federal budget's $80 billion cut to school and hospitals funding.
The meeting comes as Labor and the Greens are poised to block many of the federal budget measures, with the government left to horse-trade with new Senate cross benchers after July 1 to pass a new Medicare co-payment and pension and welfare changes.
The next state leader to face an election, Victorian Premier Denis Napthine, said he had a long and strong conversation with Mr Abbott on Thursday about the budget.
"We have from between 2014 and 2017 to absolutely shake the federal government from their top to their bottom so they understand their responsibility to meet their share of public hospital payments," the Liberal premier said.
Mr Abbott told parliament he had made it clear to all the states and territories that in 2017/18 there would be a "lower rate of increase" in funding.
"Not a cut," he said.
Arguing that road funding was boosted in the budget, Mr Abbott said: "As far as the states are concerned there are swings and roundabouts."
Treasurer Joe Hockey backed up the prime minister, saying the states would still receive $400 billion in the six years from 2017 for schools and hospitals once agreements signed with the previous Labor government expire.
"It is not cost-shifting because we don't run the schools or hospitals," he said.
Opposition Leader Bill Shorten accused the prime minister of "deceit", having promised before the election no cuts to health or schools, no new or raised taxes and no changes to pensions.
He said modelling from NATSEM (National Centre for Social and Economic Modelling) showed that some families would lose $6000 a year by 2016 because of budget measures.
Labor would fight for those families.
"If you want an election try us ... bring it on," he said in his budget reply.
Mr Abbott and Mr Hockey admitted getting the budget through the Senate could take some horse-trading, but said Labor should pass the legislation and take responsibility for leaving the books in a mess.
"I've got some advice for Tony Abbott ... why don't you horse-trade away your paid parental leave scheme and leave the pensioners alone," Mr Shorten said.
Labor has yet to decide whether to support a temporary income tax rise for people earning more than $180,000 a year, but it will oppose the Medicare co-payment, pension changes and the fuel tax lift.
Mr Hockey said the $7 Medicare co-payment was only about the cost of two "middies" of beer and much less than the $22 cost of a packet of cigarettes.
The Greens will support the fuel tax rise.
The treasurer rejected a challenge from shadow treasurer Chris Bowen to debate the budget at the National Press Club next week.
Delivering his budget-in-reply speech to parliament on Thursday, Mr Shorten said Labor would oppose deregulated university fees, the Medicare co-payment, the fuel tax rise and hits to pensions and the dole.
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