Politics updates: Kāinga Ora crackdown, changes to plug

sport2024-05-21 13:41:12627

The British band behind a song Winston Peters likes to play at rallies and quote in his speeches have told him to knock it off.

Chumbawamba have reportedly issued Peters a cease-and-desist notice after he used their song 'Tubthumping' ahead of a speech he delivered at the weekend in Palmerston North.

The band told The Spinoffthey did not authorise Peters' use of the song, and had asked their record label to intervene.

Peters says he has not been asked to stop playing the song.

Meanwhile, the new Green's co-leader asked Prime Minister Christopher Luxon if he will resign if any children are made homeless as a result of the government's Kāinga Ora policies.

On Monday it was announced the government is demanding Kāinga Ora take a tougher stance on unruly social housing tenants, saying the agency needs to make "timely usage" of formal warning notices and relocations under the Residential Tenancies Act, and to "accelerate the process of tenancy termination" in severe and persistent cases.

In response, Luxon said he did not want to see any Kāinga Ora tenants evicted but the parents of children in state housing were adults and had a choice to make about if they wanted to meet their obligations and responsibilities.

Recap the day's political news with RNZ's blog:

Address of this article:http://iraq.soorot.com/content-76b499904.html

Popular

Red Lobster seeks bankruptcy protection after closing some restaurants

Farmers reduce methane emissions by changing how they grow rice in Vietnam

Skubal has 9 strikeouts in 6 innings, Canha and Meadows homer as Tigers beat Rays 7

Warwick Davis will in new project with his daughter after death of his wife Samantha

Who is Jacob Zuma, the former South African president disqualified from next week's election?

Sydney Sweeney 'apologizes' for 'having great t**s' during bikini

Iowa lawmakers address immigration, religious freedom and taxes in 2024 session

China celebrates 30 years of internet access, boasting over 1 billion users

LINKS