Question Time for 10 May 2018
-
Hon PAUL GOLDSMITH to the Minister of Finance: Why will he borrow more money and increase taxes and levies?
-
Hon JUDITH COLLINS to the Minister of Housing and Urban Development: Is the KiwiBuild: Buying off the Plans document correct where it says “there is insufficient funding for the Crown to deliver all 100,000 KiwiBuild dwellings by itself”?
-
VIRGINIA ANDERSEN to the Minister of Finance: What capital investment needs has he been made aware of ahead of Budget 2018?
-
Hon MICHAEL WOODHOUSE to the Minister of Immigration: Does he agree with the Prime Minister when she said this week that the Government’s current immigration policy is “exactly the same one we campaigned on”?
-
Hon NATHAN GUY to the Minister for Biosecurity: Does he stand by all his statements and actions in relation to Mycoplasma bovis?
-
DARROCH BALL to the Minister of Defence: What progress, if any, has been made regarding aircrew training capability for the Royal New Zealand Air Force?
-
Hon NIKKI KAYE to the Minister of Education: Does he stand by his reported comments that he only found out in October last year that the $1.13 billion Christchurch Schools Rebuild programme was funded over successive years?
-
LAWRENCE YULE to the Minister of Employment: Does he stand by his statement in the House on Tuesday that “we won’t be punishing everybody who mucks up”?
-
GREG O'CONNOR to the Minister for Social Development: What data-related announcements has she recently made?
-
CHRIS BISHOP to the Minister of Police: Does he stand by his answer to Oral Question No. 10 yesterday, in relation to new police, that “all 1,800 work on the front line”?
-
Hon Dr NICK SMITH to the Associate Minister of State Services (Open Government): Does she stand by her statement that this Government will be “the most open, most transparent Government that New Zealand has ever had”?
-
Dr DUNCAN WEBB to the Minister of Commerce and Consumer Affairs: What advice has he received since commissioning the targeted review of consumer credit regulation in December last year on the extent of consumer credit-related harm in New Zealand?