Kuomintang Representatives Shouted for Entrance Tickets to Wu Peirong National Palace Museum: Better to Register High-Level Party Property on Private Property | Politics | 新 头壳 Newtalk



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The representative of the Kuomintang, Chen Lixu, attended the National Congress of the Kuomintang (6) today and advocated asking the DPP government to return to the National Treasury of the Forbidden City and

The representative of the Kuomintang, Chen Lixu, attended the National Congress of the Kuomintang (6) today and advocated asking the DPP government to return to the National Treasury of the Forbidden City and “just go crazy”. The image was taken from the Chinese Kuomintang’s Facebook live feed.

The 6th National Congress of the Kuomintang came to an end. During the meeting, some party representatives expressed their dissatisfaction with the Party’s Property Management Committee for freezing the property, and called on the maximum party to return the treasures of the Forbidden City. He also claimed that as long as the fighting lasts, the proceeds from the Forbidden City tickets can be attributed to the KMT. You can solve the source of income. However, this statement was immediately slapped in the face by Wu Peirong, a former transfer promotion associate researcher, who pointed out that the Kuomintang, instead of focusing its brain on the Forbidden City ticket revenue, could also check how many high matters Party level have secretly turned party property into private property over the years.

Kuomintang representative Chen Lixu said that when the Kuomintang brought a large amount of gold to Taiwan back then, the gold part was ignored. The National Treasury Palace Museum is not from Taiwan, but also brought by the Kuomintang. She also emphasized that this argument is not controversial at all. Go out there and get everyone out for a good ‘wild’ and together ask the government for the treasures of the Palace Museum. , Right! Let’s go crazy! It’s good! “

Regarding this statement, Wu Peirong said, let’s not talk about who owns the treasures and property rights collected by the Qing Empire. This seems to be a good estimate, but the representative obviously did not provide the budget for the Palace Museum. In fact, the annual income from tickets to the Forbidden City is not enough to finance the annual spending budget of the Forbidden City. In 2010, the annual revenue of the National Palace Museum was more than 1.6 billion, and the personnel expenses alone would cost 573.9 million yuan, and the estimated ticket revenue was 538.57 million yuan. The difference between the two is more than 30 million yuan.

Wu Peirong pointed out that the current operation of the Forbidden City still requires most citizens to pay taxes, and then the national treasury allocates 1.1 billion annual spending budgets to support it. The Kuomintang, instead of focusing its brain on the revenue from tickets to the Forbidden City, could also check how many high-level party affairs have secretly turned party property into private property over the years, and money recovered may be more than 500 million.

This statement was immediately slapped in the face by Wu Peirong, a former transfer promotion associate researcher, who pointed out that the Kuomintang, rather than focusing on revenue from tickets to the Forbidden City, would better check how many high-level party affairs they have turned into. secret party property into private property over the years.

The 6th National Congress of the Kuomintang came to an end. During the meeting, some party representatives expressed their dissatisfaction with the Party’s Property Management Committee for freezing the property, and called on the maximum party to return the treasures of the Forbidden City. He also claimed that as long as the fighting lasts, the proceeds from the Forbidden City tickets can be attributed to the KMT. You can solve the source of income.

Wu Peirong pointed out that annual Forbidden City ticket revenue is not enough to support the Forbidden City's annual spending budget.  Image: Obtained from Wu Peirong's Facebook

Wu Peirong pointed out that annual Forbidden City ticket revenue is not enough to support the Forbidden City’s annual spending budget. Image: Obtained from Wu Peirong’s Facebook



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