Winston Peters discusses New Zealand First's budget allocations, focusing on Kiwi Rail funding, MFAT spending, and foreign policy engagement with Iran, while critiquing government responsiveness to economic crises and advocating for greater public awareness of economic dependency
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Ts and C's apply. One of the winners out of yesterday's document, of course, was New Zealand First, who got a couple of key announcements. There's a bit over a billion for Kiwi Rail, 145 million for MFAT, and 36 million for the gold card. Winston Peters is with us. Very good morning to you. Good morning. That's um, it was you talking to the foreign minister of Iran yesterday, wasn't it? Uh no, two nights ago. Oh, two nights ago. Did you get the sense? Uh I don't want to curtail the the budget talk, but did you get the sense that the there's a regime in Iran in charge of stuff and they're in communication with each other and they know what they're doing or not?
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a defence of trade efficiency amid public service constraints
Winston Peters: Minister for Rail and Foreign Affairs on what he got across the line in the Budget, the situation in the Middle EastSpotted something wrong on this page? Report a correction.