this post was submitted on 06 Mar 2024
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This story keeps on giving. He lives in Auckland, Parliament was not in session, but hosted a party for his extended family at this unlivable place, and then it turns out he's actually stayed there at least a couple of nights.

I wonder who paid for the private Christmas do at the place he doesn't live. Did he have it in the apartment or in the public reception areas. Some other articles suggest he's also stayed there other times as well.

So, very unlivable then. I wonder, was he even staying in the apartment he was claiming the $52k benefit on?

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[–] TagMeInSkipIGotThis 10 points 9 months ago* (last edited 9 months ago)

From what I understand its a couple of nights a week while he's in Wellington for say cabinet meetings, or a session in the house. Its much more like a hotel you go to regularly than an actual house.

But, its basically a tax free allowance of NZ$52k, I think I saw someone calculate it out as being around NZ$80k that a regular person would need to earn to have that much money after tax.* In terms of the cost to the taxpayer its nothing, the issue is that it was basically a rort, because the actual cost to himself for that mortgage free apartment is nowhere near the $52k - and we have to pay for the upkeep of the Prime Ministerial apartment whether he uses it or not. He was also the first Prime MInister in about 30 years to claim the benefit; and in that time there's been a couple who also owned their own homes in Wellington but didn't claim it.

His claim is that the official lodgings are really bad, but he won't let any media in to take footage of it to see how bad it really is; and just over a year ago Jacinda Ardern lived there when she was in Wellington often with her toddler child - so the assumption is that it can't be that bad. One suggestion I heard was that his private apartment doesn't have to keep a register of guests so he could meet with anyone there. But I think the truth is that he's just a classic rich ex-ceo, book every expense against the company (or now the country) and milk the job for all its worth while you're there.

*This is more than the median wage in New Zealand, so its a pittance for a guy worth millions like Luxon, but a lot of money for a regular Kiwi.