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The Soap Box: Can you influence decisions by throwing a bit of cash around?

Author
Barry Soper,
Publish Date
Wed, 18 May 2016, 6:23AM
A $2.7 million sale of a 19 hectare block of sensitive land was approved only after the buyers agreed to donate $100,000 to Wakatipu High School, which has been used for laptops and iPads. Photo / iStock
A $2.7 million sale of a 19 hectare block of sensitive land was approved only after the buyers agreed to donate $100,000 to Wakatipu High School, which has been used for laptops and iPads. Photo / iStock

The Soap Box: Can you influence decisions by throwing a bit of cash around?

Author
Barry Soper,
Publish Date
Wed, 18 May 2016, 6:23AM

It's the business of politics with business being the operative word.

It's the approach to politics that's come since John Key slipped comfortably into the Italian leather, high backed executive chair on the ninth floor of the Beehive.

The most classic example of it was his pokies for convention centre deal in Auckland where building's now well advanced.

And another example is his casual approach to a deal that was done in Queenstown where a Singaporean mother and son were going through the Overseas Investment Office process of buying more than nineteen hectares of sensitive land in neighbouring Arrowtown where they plan to build a holiday house.

They coughed up a hundred grand to the Wakatipu High School for computers and laptops and hey presto, their application was approved.

That's cool, Key says, they're contributing to the community they're investing in. More like currying favour with the Investment Office to ensure their approval's granted, and it was.

It does raise questions about whether you can influence decisions by throwing a bit of cash around.

But we're told all that's going to change with substantial increases in application fees, probably early next month, which currently range between ten and twenty thousand bucks. Key tells us it'll increase staff at the OIO by around 25 percent and ensure promises that are made by would-be investors are kept.

That'll come as some relief to the likes of Labour's Stuart Nash who's been banging on about a Malaysian forestry company which was given the go ahead twenty years ago to buy 33 thousand hectares of land near Gisborne on the promise it'd be building a forestry processing facility - they're still waiting!

So while the rich seem to have little trouble getting into the country, it's the poor that are of more concern to Labour's Andrew Little who was out in Otara yesterday.

Publicity had been given to seventeen people living in a house there that overflowed into a tent. The media were told to turn up at an address in front of a house that fitted the description.

The occupants came out and told them to move on, claiming their house was being renovated which was why the tent had been erected.

A confused Andrew Little was lost for words, saying there was a house he was invited to which just happened to be at the same address the media was given, then he was uninvited because the occupants didn't want attention drawn to them.

Oops!

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