Trudeau 家2个看孩子的保姆由纳税人出钱(转贴)

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Trudeau children's nannies being paid for by taxpayers
Caregivers will be paid $15-$20 an hour during the day and $11-$13 hourly at night
By Chris Hall, CBC News Posted: Nov 30, 2015 9:56 PM ET Last Updated: Dec 01, 2015 11:42 AM ET



nanny-trudeau-cbc.jpg


Taxpayers foot the bill for Trudeau nannies
Chris Hall

National Affairs Editor

Chris Hall is the CBC's National Affairs Editor, based in the Parliamentary Bureau in Ottawa. He began his reporting career with the Ottawa Citizen, before moving to CBC Radio in 1992, where he worked as a national radio reporter in Toronto, Halifax and St. John's. He returned to Ottawa and the Hill in 1998.

Canadian taxpayers are paying the wages of two nannies hired to care for the children of Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and his wife, Sophie Grégoire-Trudeau, according to cabinet orders posted online.

The hirings were approved late last week, with cabinet authorizing the appointment of the two women under the Official Residences Act as "special assistants at the prime minister's residence."

They will be paid between $15 and $20 an hour during the day and $11 to $13 an hour for night shifts effective Nov. 4 — the day Trudeau and his cabinet were sworn in.

The disclosure comes after an election campaign where Trudeau repeatedly attacked the Conservatives' enhanced universal child care benefit, or UCCB, and income splitting for families, arguing rich families like his and former prime minister Stephen Harper's didn't need taxpayers' help.

"In these times, Mr. Harper's top priority is to give wealthy families like his and mine $2,000," Trudeau said in reference to the Conservatives' income-splitting tax credit. "Let me tell you something: We don't need it. And Canada can't afford it."

Trudeau is also entitled to collect annual UCCB payments of about $3,400 for his three children.

He promised to give the money to charity.

Nanny posted pics of kids online


One of the women hired was with the Trudeaus this past week on the prime minister's foreign trip that wrapped up Monday at the UN climate change conference in Paris. She posted photos online of the couple's two children who came on the trip.

There were also shots of her with the Trudeaus' youngest child on Facebook visiting museums and at the hotel where they stayed in Paris.

The prime minister's director of communications, Kate Purchase, said in an email that the two women who have been hired are doing more than childcare.

"Like all families of prime ministers, a small number of staff provide assistance. Given the nature of the prime minister's responsibilities and his young family, the Trudeaus employ two household employees who, in addition to performing other duties around the house, act as secondary caregivers to the three children," Purchase said.

Section 7.1 of the Official Residence Act says cabinet may appoint "a steward or housekeeper and such other employees" deemed necessary for the management of the prime minister's residence.

This isn't the first time questions have been raised about whether taxpayers were footing the bill for child care.

The issue arose in May 1984 when then Conservative leader Brian Mulroney was asked by a television interviewer if taxpayers would pay for ''nannies'' for his three children as they did for Trudeau's father, Pierre Trudeau, when he was prime minister.

"No, no," Mulroney replied.

The Canadian Press reported again in November of that year that Mulroney's chief of staff, Fred Doucet, denied the family employed a government-paid nanny while Mulroney was opposition leader, saying the woman was actually a maid who "interfaces with the children in a habitual way."

http://www.cbc.ca/news/politics/justin-trudeau-nannies-taxpayers-1.3344533
 
土豆对自己家的钱看得真紧啊!我的敬仰之情犹如滔滔江水连绵不绝。。。:evil:
 
最后编辑:
http://cfcnews.com/8681 (转贴)
“星期一,加拿大广播公司记者从议会网站上读到的一项政令显示,加拿大政府已经开始用公款支付总理官邸聘用两名保姆的费用。

这条政令说,根据加拿大有关总理官邸的规定,议会批准总理特鲁多和他的夫人聘用两名保姆,作为“总理官邸的特别助理”。虽然议会是在上个星期末才发 布这条政令,但有效的开始日期却提前到11月4日, 即特鲁多和他的内阁成员宣誓就职的日子。两名保姆的工资分别是白天工作的每小时 15-20加元,夜班工作的11-13加元。

当这条政令出现在人们眼前时,耳边仍然回响着在大选期间,特鲁多抨击保守党“增加育儿津贴”和“夫妻分别报税”的话音。他认为:富有的家庭, 例如他家和哈珀家,不需要纳税人的帮助。”

我服了。。。:buttrock:
 
这样我们的好总理才能全身心的投入到走秀当中
 
对于自由党来说,这连跟牛毛都算不上。土豆内心独白,“我就是帅,你咋着吧?”
 
对于自由党来说,这连跟牛毛都算不上。土豆内心独白,“我就是帅,你咋着吧?”
为啥要夺取政权,真玛德是为穷人谋福利啊?
先把自己喂肥了先。
 
难道要用30几万一年的总理去看孩子?还是用二十一小时的?
 
Justin Trudeau billing taxpayers for nannies is 'hypocritical,' Lisa Raitt says
PM is 'only man in Canada who makes $325,000 who is going to get money for his child care'
CBC News Posted: Dec 01, 2015 7:35 PM ET Last Updated: Dec 01, 2015 8:42 PM ET



20151201RAITTNANNY_2500kbps_852x480_2679793053.jpg


Opposition says Trudeau should pay for nannies out of his own pocket

Conservative finance critic Lisa Raitt says it is "hypocritical" for Prime Minister Justin Trudeau to bill taxpayers for nannies after he spent the last campaign telling voters he didn't need the Tory child tax benefit because he had more than enough money to support his children.

CBC News reported Monday that taxpayers are paying the wages of two nannies who care for the children of Trudeau and his wife, Sophie Grégoire-Trudeau. The hirings were approved late last week, with cabinet authorizing the appointment of the two women under the Official Residences Act as "special assistants" at the prime minister's residence.

Kate Purchase, director of communications in the prime minister's office, told CBC News the Trudeaus employ "two household employees who, in addition to performing other duties around the house, act as secondary caregivers" to the couple's three children.



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Trudeau billing taxpayers for child care

In an interview with CBC News Tuesday, Raitt said during the campaign Trudeau said "he is one of the one per cent and he was speaking on behalf of them when he said 'we think we can pay a little bit more, I'm going to reject personally the Universal Child Care Benefit.'"

"But then in another guise [he] does accept taxpayer dollars … so that he can care for his kids by the use of two nannies funded by the state. I think that's hypocritical and I think he should take it out of his own salary," Raitt said.

Trudeau said on the campaign trail that he opposed the Conservative child benefit plan because it sends "cheques to millionaires," adding that any government plan should help families who need a leg up, "not families like mine or Mr. Harper's."

Raitt said Trudeau's latest move is a betrayal of those principles.

"The only man in Canada who makes $325,000 a year who is going to get taxpayer dollars for his child care is the prime minister of Canada and I think that's wrong," she said.

The women will earn between $15 and $20 an hour for work during the day and a lower amount when working at night.

'We still made it work without taxpayer dollars'
Raitt said that the Trudeau family should follow the lead of ministers in the previous Conservative government who juggled young families and busy careers by making alternate arrangements and paying out-of-pocket for their child care.

"My kids were 7 and 4 when I started … I never used taxpayer dollars in order to look after the needs of my children, that was something that I have to do in order to have a household. We still made it work without taxpayer dollars," Raitt, a former minister in the Harper government, said.

Conservative Interim Leader Rona Ambrose said Trudeau's nannies have become a "political issue" because he made a point of rejecting the child benefit because of his family's wealth.

Facebook posts raise security concerns
The two nannies in question have posted a number of pictures of the Trudeau children on their Facebook pages, including some shots from their recent trip to Paris with the prime minister.

trudeau-children.jpg

A nanny to Prime Minister Justin Trudeau's children, poses for a picture with Ella-Grace, 6, and Hadrien Trudeau, 1. (Facebook)

While travelling in Europe, one of the nannies also posted the location of the hotels the prime minister and his family were staying at while attending summits in Malta and Paris.

After CBC News reported on the posts, the woman either removed them or tightened her security settings to obscure the content from public viewing.

trudeau-nanny.jpg

A nanny to the Trudeau family poses with Hadrien Trudeau, 1, at the Fondation Louis Vuitton art gallery in Paris, France. She was travelling with the Trudeau family to the COP21 climate change summit. (Facebook)

"In terms of security, both women went through security clearances and we're very open with what the family is doing when they are with the prime minister," Purchase said when asked about the posts as a potential security risk.

"Beyond that, we don't comment on security considerations."

Prime ministers face 'special situation,' former nanny says
Trudeau is not the first prime minister to have nannies on staff at his official residence.

His father, Pierre Trudeau, employed a nanny to care for his three young boys after he and their mother divorced.

Isabelle LeCointee, who was the Trudeau family nanny from 1981 to 1984, said she doesn't have a problem with the current arrangement.

"I don't think we can compare the situation of the prime minister and everyone's family," LeCointee said in an interview with Alan Neal on CBC Radio's All in a Day. "I can understand people thinking that it's our money, like it's my money too. But at the same time, I think it's a special situation. We have to take that into consideration, too."

Trudeau's successor, Progressive Conservative Prime Minister Brian Mulroney, also had a nanny on staff.

Mulroney faced controversy after he pledged to personally pay for the nanny, but later reneged on that promise and had the government foot the bill.



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Mulroney is asked 'Are we going to have to pay for your nannies?'

His then-chief of staff, Fred Doucet, defended the move, saying that the woman was actually a maid who "interfaces with the children in a habitual way."

Laureen Harper, the wife of the former prime minister, left her career behind to become a stay-at-home mom after her husband was elected.

In a 2007 interview, Harper said she didn't hire a nanny, she makes her kids' lunches and that they are just an "average Canadian family."
 
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