Queensland Treasurer Jackie Trad says the state has been thrown crumbs by a federal government that is spending big elsewhere.
Ms Trad has voiced her disappointment in the Morrison government's budget to reporters, business leaders gathered for a post-budget breakfast in Brisbane, on radio and in parliament.
"We are being delivered the crumbs," she told parliament on Wednesday.
She was followed by a line of ministers who cried foul over how the budget has put the infrastructure, health and education needs of a growing state aside in favour of projects farther south.
On Tuesday they spent Question Time asking for a fair share of funding and on Wednesday they said Queensland had missed out.
"It confirms that we won't receive our fair share of infrastructure funding and any money that we are promised will not materialise for years," Ms Trad added.
However, farmers who lost hundreds of thousands of cattle when floods swept through their western Queensland properties in February are being offered $3.3 billion worth of various supports.
Money has also been put aside for community-led programs like the one to control the Yellow Crazy Ant population.
Queensland has also scored $4 billion in new infrastructure spending, although only only a small portion of that will be spent in the forward estimates.
Ms Trad and Labor Premier Annastacia Palaszczuk say the federal government won't work with them.
They say their $5.4 billion Cross River Rail project has been ignored while money has been thrown at similar developments in Victoria and NSW.
But Liberal National Party leader Deb Frecklington says it is state Labor leaders who need to work with the Morrison government.
"There is billions of dollars on the table for infrastructure in Queensland and it is only Annastacia Palaszczuk and her ministers who are pushing this funding away," Ms Frecklington said.
Her deputy Tim Mander walked parliament through a list of projects on which he says the state government wasted taxpayer money, including a study of shark attacks in the Whitsundays and a weight loss app for dogs.
Minister after minister got to their feet in parliament on Wednesday to detail how the budget had short-changed their portfolios.
As Minister for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Partnerships, Ms Trad welcomed the federal focus on addressing a spike in indigenous suicide, but said the $5 million put forward was not enough.
"That's $5 million over the entire nation and over five years, so I think that indicates that this is a cursory response to what is a significant issue," she said.