The Liberal National Party has costed its promises, while Labor has poured out passion just days out from the Queensland election.
Premier Campbell Newman, Deputy Premier Jeff Seeney and Treasurer Tim Nicholls on Tuesday said the LNP will fund $5.97 billion in promises by using part of the $37 billion it expects from leasing public assets like ports and the power network for 49 years.
Funding for the rest of the LNP's $1.51 billion in pledges has already been allocated in the 2014-15 budget.
Privatising assets will mean the LNP's election promises will not affect the government's plan to return a budget operating surplus of $188 million in 2015-2016.
"We have the means to fund the future of this state," Mr Newman said.
"The future of growth, the infrastructure, the services and create those jobs we've been talking about."
Although the LNP expects to rake in $37 billion from leasing public assets, the government couldn't say whether infrastructure would be funded or debt repaid first.
"The reduction of debt obviously is a key priority, obviously that will be for Treasury, but I'm sure there will obviously be competing claims from my colleagues in relation to infrastructure," Mr Newman said.
"I'm not sure how that vote might end up."
But the treasurer promised the government would be able to do both.
Mr Newman compared the plans of the LNP with Labor, which is yet to provide its costings or outline infrastructure plans.
"That isn't good government, that is negligence," he said.
Opposition Leader Annastacia Palaszczuk had no costings or new policies to offer, but what she lacked in detail she made up for in passion.
Ms Palaszczuk went to a small timber hall at Kallangur to rally the Labor faithful.
She was greeted by a cheering crowd of supporters in red Labor t-shirts.
"Will you help me stop the sale of assets?" she loudly asked them.
"Yeah," came the unanimous reply.
After her speech, which focused on the negative effects of public asset sales, the crowd started chanting "stop the sale, stop the sale".
The Labor leader then flew to Cairns where she claimed the Newman government had scrapped the state's Local Industry Policy three days after the election was called on January 6.
The policy required government businesses to report annually on their efforts to attract locals for major projects, procurement and tenders.
"They've stripped it away in the cover of night without Queenslanders knowing," Ms Palaszczuk said.
"They are stripping these assets, getting them ready for sale, and they've been doing this whilst the election was called in breach of caretaker conventions."
But the LNP denied that was the case, saying they had scrapped the policy and replaced it with a different one last April.
Labor is expected to release infrastructure policies and costings before the end of the week.
Queenslanders go to the polls on January 31.
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