Craig Kelly Wasted Taxpayer Dollars On A Bunch Of Fake Money To Show The Government Is In Debt
We love prop comedy at Budget time.
It’s the Budget, baby! And that means money is on everyone’s mind.
Sadly this “everyone” includes federal independent MP Craig Kelly, who has pulled the most baffling Budget stunt imaginable: Printing a comical pile of fake money to represent how much net debt the government is allegedly in.
“Wouldn’t you love to have this much money? Well you do!!,” Craig Kelly, who had his Facebook account deleted last month for spreading COVID misinformation, tweeted this morning.
“This represents close to $1 TRILLION of Federal and State Government net DEBT that YOU and future generations need to pay off.”
The gag? Well, Craig Kelly actually used over $1000 of real, taxpayer money to fund his pallet of fake money in an attempt to prove how much money the government wastes. Yes. We paid for this waste. Ironic, no?
PRESS CONFERENCE – CRAIG KELLY MP – 9.30am Tues 11th May, Mural Hall, 2nd Floor Parliament House
Wouldn't you love to have this much money ?
Well you do !!
This represents close to $1 TRILLION of Federal & State Government net DEBT that YOU & future generations need to pay off pic.twitter.com/ztKH5Wv9SD
— Craig Kelly MP (@CraigKellyMP) May 10, 2021
Craig Kelly admits the cost of this stunt was about $1000, printed from his communications allowance, meaning taxpayers paid for these fake notes #auspol https://t.co/Gc2aVZU3OW
— ?????? ????? ? (@naveenjrazik) May 10, 2021
The incredibly unnecessary stunt was funded out of his taxpayer-funded printing allowance, with The New Daily political editor Josh Butler reporting that Craig Kelly claimed the move was “better than a business card” because his details were on the back of the fake bills.
Along with the cost of printing the “Neds” reaching “over $1,000”, Kelly apparently also had to shell out for the licensing of the photo of Ned Kelly in “a tribute to the gangsters and villains of the past”. The MP explained that his pallet full of fake money was created to “teach the kids about debt” by visualising what the government’s record debt would look like.
“If this was $100 bills, stacked tight, it would be $100 million dollars. So ten of these pallets would be a billion. But we would need 10,000 of these pallets — it would go for 10km long — to be a trillion dollars,” Kelly waffled on, while failing to recognise that this misuse of taxpayer dollars only adds to the debt he’s complaining about.
“That’s the debt this nation, both state and Federal governments are headed towards.”
I’m pleased to inform you that Craig Kelly has planned a #budget2021 stunt with a comical pile of fake money pic.twitter.com/xtrmcfT53J
— Josh Butler (@JoshButler) May 10, 2021
Craig Kelly has just confirmed he funded this stunt, which is about government spending, out of his taxpayer-funded electoral allowance. Notes that he has his details on the back, says it’s “better than a business card” pic.twitter.com/gHAQYXVHwi
— Josh Butler (@JoshButler) May 10, 2021
But there are just so many questions we have about this stunt. First, and most importantly, why the fuck has Craig Kelly done this? What does the independent MP actually gain from trying to show what the debt looks like? And why the hell is Ned Kelly, of all people, on the bill?!
Moreover, why couldn’t Craig Kelly fit the $1,000,000,000,000 all on the one line? And why did Kelly decide to make the “trillion dollar” note the exact same colour as a normal $100 note?
Plus, if the government is only in “close to one trillion” in debt then why has the MP printed a pallet of the fake bills? One single trillion dollar bill would easily represent the debt. Seriously. The world doesn’t even have as much money Kelly’s pallet of trillions represents.
It’s estimated that there is just over $90 trillion of broad money circulating in the world currently. In Kelly’s world, this could be represented by 90 single “trillion dollar” notes. Bands of money, that are held together by currency straps, are always made in packages of 100 notes. This means all the money that is currently in the world would fit in a single band of Craig Kelly’s trillion dollar notes.
Basically, what I’m asking is why the fuck has he printed an entire pallet when one bill would have proved his point very easily?
If that was a solid stack of those fake bills (which I’m sure it isn’t), I’ve guesstimated there’d be 450k of them. 450 quadrillion dollarydoos!
— Bela Lugosi’s dad (@mnurkic) May 10, 2021
Who authorized this ridiculous waste of our money on his money?
— Mandy Passmore (@MandyPassmore) May 10, 2021
So he’s complaining of taxpayers getting ripped off, while ripping off his own electorate
— Debbie Doyle (@websyd) May 10, 2021
Ex-Liberal MP Craig Kelly with a stack of fake trillion dollar notes to represent government debt, which is around $1 trillion…but we’re meant to imagine the fake trillions are $100 notes, which would apparently mean this pile is worth $100m, but – never mind. Happy Budget Day pic.twitter.com/XtiSlZB2p3
— Fiona Willan (@Fi_Willan) May 10, 2021
In typical Craig Kelly fashion, nothing make sense. But back-peddling a little, Craig Kelly told 9 News that he actually hadn’t invoiced his print expenses yet and suggested that he “should actually pay for this myself”.
So let’s hope and pray that he does follow his own advice here.