新西兰Judith Collins爆料!Kiwibuild就是个笑话!
在新西兰
Dear, oh dear, oh dear, Labour is in serious difficulty with KiwiBuild.
Rushing to meet their self imposed targets before Christmas, Phil Twyford and Grant Robertson signed up a taxpayer guarantee of the prices for KiwiBuild houses so the the developers can rest easy at night.
No matter what the market is saying a house is worth, Phil Twyford and Labour are paying the developer a top up amount so New Zealand taxpayers are now guaranteeing KiwiBuild property developers a good profit.
This is even even when a first home buyer pays the developer less than the full price asked by the developer.
How this works is that if Labour guarantees a developer a price of $650,000 for a dwelling, and that dwelling doesn't sell for that price to a KiwiBuild approved purchaser, then the dwelling can be sold on the open market and if it sells for less than $650,000, then the taxpayer funds the balance.
That's the guaranteed price that the scheme works on.
According to the property developers that I have met with in Christchurch, Christchurch has a surplus of homes, houses are taking a long time to sell and prices are more likely to fall than to rise.
Phil Twyford and Grant Robertson have signed New Zealand taxpayers into their Developer Welfare Scheme and they've done this for houses that in some cases were consented in 2016 and built months before the Government price guarantee was signed. The guarantee was totally unnecessary to get the homes built as they already were built. It's been a big bonus to a few KiwiBuild developers who should be laughing all the way to the bank.
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有钱!任性!*
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我怎么觉得工党做了件好事呢?
if it sells for less than $650,000, then the taxpayer funds the balance
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怎么说?
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政治爆料基本就是相互呕心吧。
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taxpayer funds the balance
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虽然我不看好KB,并且认为Phil Twyford能力也不够,但这个Judith Colins 绝对是个老巫婆,是个碧池。
她担任警察部长和司法部长时,治安搞的一团糟。
她还以内阁部长的身份为某中国企业站台,牟取私利,为了平息众怒,钥匙只好把她雪藏。
她老公与华人富商有着不可告人的商业关系。
… …
谁来继续爆爆她的料?!
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女人都是天生的政治家
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赞同。 。。。
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那为啥这样还没人买kiwibuild呢
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关键词
兰维乐
david wong-tong
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对于大家来说,因为半岛半华老公在公款出差的时候谈私人生意被 John Key 逼着辞掉部长职位的 Judith Collins 就是个笑话
https://www.noted.co.nz/currently/politics/her-majesty-judith-collins/
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She survived the Oravida scandal, but is Judith Collins now damaged goods?
A man in a business suit and a good tan swooped on Judith Collins, 55, when she stepped into the lobby of a downtown hotel for our interview.
He introduced himself and they shook hands. He smiled and nodded and gazed upon her with something resembling awe. When he left, I said to her, “One of your fans?” She confirmed that was the case. O Queen! Her Majesty, the Minister of Justice, ACC and Ethnic Affairs, looked up to, respected, admired, feared by her opponents, loathed by her colleagues, inspiring an intense loyalty and a kind of love — everything was going so swimmingly until Oravida. She was spoken of as Prime Minister in waiting. O fat chance now.
Like many introverts, she’s theatrical and grand; like most actresses, she needs an audience. I emailed her office an interview request. A reply came back within an hour: “Judith could meet you at 9.30am on Saturday….” Another story came up and I asked for a raincheck, and then Oravida happened. I wondered whether she preferred to go to ground after that. I put through another request. “Judith could meet you…”
We met twice. She wore pearls and rings and brooches, an immaculately presented Tory matron with pale green eyes. I asked her whether I was now talking to someone who felt like damaged goods, and she said, “No, not at all. Do you think I should?” I confirmed that was the case. She said on the contrary, it allowed people to see her softer side.
She meant the tears of March. She cried over spilt milk, on camera and again over the phone to the Herald’s Rachel Glucina, both times weeping at the mess she got herself into during the Oravida scandal. Oravida, Oravida. Once merely the blameless name of a milk export company no one had ever heard of, now a word as common as muck, ever since Collins was accused of a conflict of interest — her husband is an Oravida board member, and Collins took time out of a ministerial visit to China to dine with Oravida officials.
Much of the scandal has been boring. It’s almost got to the point where Labour has demanded to know whether she ordered noodles or rice. Sweet and sour-gate, dim sum-gate — whatever, but the interest was in Collins’ shifty and indignant response to the whole thing. It’s made her look like she’s had something to hide, and she’s cut a lonely, marooned figure in Parliament.
There was a kind of apology, not much, and tears, a few; there were also recriminations and accusations, her familiar bitter tone,