Here Are The Fifty Most Powerful People In NZ
Here Are The Fifty Most Powerful People In New Zealand:
(This month the weekly magazine The Listener revealed “the 50 Most Powerful People in New Zealand… Six panelists took their pickings from politics, business, law, sports, media and entertainment…”)
Bea F,
cleaner. Works all night in the city, comes home and
prepares breakfast for the kids.
Brian C, electrician.
Once almost made the Wellington B reps.
Molly B, shift
worker. Loves her children, hardly ever sees them.
Alan
V, printer. Having trouble with mortgage
re-payments
Tommy S, rigger. Keeps getting crook, going
in and out of hospital.
Bernice F, nurse. Saving for a
family trip home to Samoa.
Kevin B, boilermaker. Drinks
heavily to get through the week.
Mehta P, call centre
worker. Spends weekends visiting son in prison.
Mary T,
teacher. Desperately figuring out ways to get kids to pass
their exams.
Sandy R, waiter. Dreams of playing music
full-time.
—and—
Kylie T, hairdresser. Constant rows
with husband over family finances.
Liz D, saleswoman.
Worries at children’s health.
Mick O, orchard worker.
Being treated for chronic depression.
Tim U, seaman.
Trying to pay for a daughter to go to university
debt-free.
Sione F, plastic extruder. Family car has
broken down yet again.
Brian M, line operator.
Moonlighting as a night watchman.
Harry B, agricultural
labourer. Once wanted to be an actor.
Curly S, brewery
worker. Working long weekends, saving for house.
Betty M,
early childhood worker. Teaches Maori in
evenings.
Pauline N, bank teller. Keeps hens, sells the
eggs and buys Lotto tickets.
—and—
Bronwyn T, social
worker. Desperate to leave New Zealand for
Queensland.
Brigid C, part-time supermarket teller.
Can’t afford new clothes for kids.
Phil E, railway
worker. Twins on the way, re-mortgaged to cover house
extensions.
Chrissie D, dairy milker. Dreams of
travelling to Europe.
Jo D, forestry worker. Provided
children with a computer the family can’t
afford.
Willie W, freezing worker. Blew last week’s
wages at the Casino.
Sammi T, rubbish collector. Thinks
Bro’ Town the best programme ever.
Don J, rest home
worker. Lost an arm in an industrial accident.
Jason B,
builder’s labourer. Desperate gambler
Pania H, midwife.
Can’t understand her own kids, doesn’t know why others
want more.
—and—
Snow W, carpenter. Constantly
picked on by the boss.
Brenda E, kitchen hand. Lives in
brother-in-law’s garage with two kids.
Alison S, data
processor. Goes home from work, falls immediately
asleep.
Barry G, painter. In trouble with police.
Paul
C, aluminium installer. Lives with his parents but doesn’t
get on with his father.
Hone H, crane operator. Just
joined the union.
Amir M, baker. Can’t wait to be
re-united with family still in Afghanistan.
Leo S, drain
layer. Never votes, can’t see the reason for it.
Gary
K, timber Worker. Wishes he’d stayed on at high
school.
Leanne L, shelf stacker. Wants to have kids but
her husband’s going to have to get a decent-paying
job.
—and—
Susie A, journalist. Paying off a student
loan, sure she has a system for winning at the
races.
Dave P, driver. Teenage daughter killed in a car
crash.
Pete G, mill hand. Never really recovered from a
bashing.
Milly W, seamstress. Decided to give up smoking,
failed.
Connie F, courier. Doing part-time university
studies.
Nina R, motor assembly operator. Hopelessly in
debt on credit card.
Jimmy W, watersider. Coaches local
school footy team two nights a week, referees on
Saturdays.
Hillary F, librarian. Finding food prices are
getting too dear and cutting back.
Charlie G,
storeperson. Doing periodic detention after a
punch-up.
Toni J, timber worker. Ran a fund-raising
campaign for a sick relative…
Not one a
politician
No banker or director
Not one of them a
judge
Or senior civil servant
Or running Sealord
Fisheries
Or the Engineering Union;
There’s not a
CEO
Or media executive
But when they pull the
plug—
The juice stops.
B.
Traven
Mangere