“They want to attack me having
a quid…They want to attack me and Lucy for working hard, investing, having a
go, making money, paying plenty of tax, giving back to the
community." [Malcolm Bligh Turnbull, The
Guardian, 25 June 2018]
“The
honourable member has asked about my investments, which are set out in the
members' interests disclosure….. If honourable members opposite want to
start a politics-of-envy campaign about it, I don't think they'll be telling
people anything they don't know.”
[Malcolm Bligh Turnbull, Hansard, 25 June 2018]
“It has
embraced the politics of envy and class war”;
[Malcolm Bligh Turnbull speaking about the parliamentary Labor Party, Hansard, 25 June 2018]
“He says I'm a snob." [Malcolm Bligh Turnbull speaking about
Labor leader Bill Shorten, Hansard,
19 June 2018]
I can’t speak
for anybody else. However I would gladly “attack” the vainglorious Malcolm Bligh Turnbull - not for being wealthy but on the basis that:
(ii) he reportedly
made millions from the logging industry in the Solomon Islands in the early
1990s – when Hong Kong-listed Axiom
Forest Resources of which he was chair virtually clear-felled its holdings
and, whose logging practises were considered "amongst
the worst in the world";
(xi) he
continues to move forward with imposing a punitive
cashless welfare payment system on the majority of welfare recipients while also continuing the reduction of funding to vital social services;
and
(xii) his
first response to any challenge to his world view is to sneer at both the
questioner and the content of the question.
An more authentic telling of Malcolm Turnbull’s own ‘poor boy made good’ story
Malcolm Bligh Turnbull went to a public primary school at Vaucluse in Sydney’s affluent
Eastern Suburbs for about three years. During this period the family
income was in the vicinity of £8,700 to £9,700 a year – with his mother
earning four times the average female wage as a successful screenwriter.
Then from the
age of eight he went to Sydney Grammar School as a border during and after his parent’s
divorce proceedings. He received a scholarship for at least part of that time.
When Malcolm
was in Year 10, his father bought a luxurious three-bedroom apartment in Point
Piper. The apartment had extensive water views and cost Bruce Turnbull est. $36,000.
Before that both he and his father had lived in a flat belonging to his mother.
He graduated
from university during the years when undergraduate and post-graduate tertiary
education was free of course fees in Australia. All this is on the public
record.
Malcom Turnbull
purchased his first house while still a university undergraduate.
At age 23 he
bought a semi-detached house in inner-Sydney Newtown for almost $50,000 and at
age 25 he bought a Redfern terrace for $40,000. He bought his own first home as
a married man, for an undisclosed sum in Potts Point, after returning from his stint as a Rhodes schlor at Oxford University.
Malcolm
Turnbull inherited assets worth an est. $2 million from his hotel-broker
father before he turned 29 years of age according to one of his
biographers, Paddy Manning.
He went into a cleaning business with former NSW premier Neville Wran. After the sale of his co-founding interest in IT company Oze Email Ltd for a reported $60 million, he also founded a merchant bank
with Nicholas Whitlam, son of the former prime minister (both Packer and Larry
Adler gave their financial backing for a short time).
In 2008 BRW reportedly estimated Malcolm and Lucy's joint wealth as $133 million and, in 2010 he was included in the BRW Rich 200 list for the second year running for having a personal fortune of $186 million. He and his wife Lucy went on to greater wealth which was last jointly estimated to be in the
vicinity of $200 million.
It has been reported that Malcolm Turnbull and his wife give $550,000 annually to charity via the Turnbull Foundation - their "private ancillary fund" which apparently has a family corporation/s as trustee/s and appears to act as a tax minimisation scheme as the entire $550,000 is potentially 100 per cent tax deductible.
The personal income tax ‘cuts’ recently pass by the Australian Parliament will potentially benefit the Prime Minister, as will the
proposed company tax cuts as he owns or co-owns a number of active corporations.
I say potentially, because during the Panama Papers exposé it was revealed that Malcolm Turnbull is not adverse to availing himself of the advantages of international tax havens and likely already pays little tax on much of his financial interests.
1 comment:
Excellent article. Wasn't aware of some of his earlier forays into bastardry (e.g. the early court case (Costigan/Meagher) or his work as rent boy for Packer. But it all fits the person. What a despicable man he is!
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