Derek Quigley | |
---|---|
14th Minister of Works and Development | |
In office 11 December 1981 –15 June 1982 | |
Prime Minister | Robert Muldoon |
Preceded by | Bill Young |
Succeeded by | Tony Friedlander |
14th Minister of Tourism | |
In office 12 February 1981 –11 December 1981 | |
Prime Minister | Robert Muldoon |
Preceded by | Warren Cooper |
Succeeded by | Rob Talbot |
14th Minister of Housing | |
In office 13 December 1978 –15 June 1982 | |
Prime Minister | Robert Muldoon |
Preceded by | Eric Holland |
Succeeded by | Tony Friedlander |
Member of the New Zealand Parliament for Rangiora | |
In office 29 November 1975 –14 July 1984 | |
Preceded by | Kerry Burke |
Succeeded by | Jim Gerard |
Member of Parliament for ACT Party List | |
In office 12 October 1996 –27 November 1999 | |
Personal details | |
Born | Waikari,New Zealand | 31 January 1932
Political party | ACT New Zealand |
Other political affiliations | National (1962–1984) |
Derek Francis Quigley QSO (born 31 January 1932) is a New Zealand former politician. He was a prominent member of the National Party during the late 1970s and early 1980s,and was known for his support of free-market economics and trade liberalisation. Quigley left the National Party after clashing with its leadership,and later co-founded the ACT New Zealand party.
Quigley was born on 31 January 1932 in Waikari,a small town in the northern Canterbury Region,the son of Francis John Quigley. [1] He attended Waipara Primary school before continuing with education in Christchurch;first at Medbury School,then Christ's College,followed by the University of Canterbury. [2] He later donated his personal parliamentary library,which covers his political career until 1984,to Canterbury University's Macmillan Brown Library. [3]
He farmed at Waipara from 1949. He gained one of two scholarships for young farmers from the Meat and Wool Board and used it to study farming in Britain and the United States. He completed a law degree while farming and joined a Christchurch law firm,where he became a senior partner and practised as a lawyer. [2]
In 1956,Quigley married Judith Ann Dickson,and the couple had four children. [1] He later married Susan McAffer. [1]
Quigley was National's electorate chairman for the Rangiora electorate. In the Canterbury-Westland division,he was deputy chairman. He was a member of the Dominion Council and served on its executive committee. [2]
He also stood in the safe Labour seat of Sydenham against cabinet minister Mabel Howard in the 1960 and 1963 elections. [4] He also sought the National nomination for the safe National seat of Hurunui at a 1961 by-election,but was unsuccessful. [5] As a 30-year-old,Quigley stood as the National Party's candidate in the 1962 by-election in the Timaru electorate,but was beaten by Labour's candidate Sir Basil Arthur. [6] [7]
Quigley stood in the Rangiora electorate in the 1975 election. [8] [9] The electorate had been taken from National by Kerry Burke of the Labour Party at the previous election,but was won back by Quigley. [10]
Years | Term | Electorate | List | Party | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1975 –1978 | 38th | Rangiora | National | ||
1978 –1981 | 39th | Rangiora | National | ||
1981 –1984 | 40th | Rangiora | National | ||
1996 –1999 | 45th | List | 2 | ACT |
After three years as a backbencher, Quigley was appointed to Cabinet, and held a number of ministerial roles. He was Minister of Housing (1978–1982), Minister of Tourism (1981), Minister of Works and Development (1981–1982), and Associate Minister of Finance (1978–1981). [11] He held further minor ministerial posts as Minister of Earthquake and War Damage (1978–1982), [12] Minister of Government Life Insurance (1978–1982), [13] Minister of Public Trust (1978–1981), [14] and Minister for State Insurance (1978–1982). [15]
Quigley rapidly earned the hostility of senior National Party figures, however, with his criticism of the government's economic policies. The Prime Minister of the day, Robert Muldoon, favoured decidedly interventionist policies, but Quigley preferred a more laissez-faire approach, and considered Muldoon's interventionism to be contrary to the traditional spirit of the National Party. [16] In February 1981, Quigley contested the deputy leadership of the party, despite Muldoon openly saying that he could not work with him. Quigley's main opponent (and Muldoon's strong favourite) was Duncan MacIntyre, a long-serving Muldoon loyalist. Bill Birch retired from the contest in favour of MacIntyre, and Jim Bolger was eliminated first. Quigley was narrowly defeated by MacIntyre. [17]
A week after Quigley lost the deputy leadership race, he was dismissed by Muldoon as Associate Finance Minister, reducing his ability to criticise Muldoon's economic policies effectively; Warren Cooper succeeded him. [18] This was also related to a preceding event in December 1980 when Quigley spoke of releasing an "alternative economic manifesto" and Muldoon threatened to sack him from the Cabinet. Muldoon eventually relieved Quigley not only of the finance associate portfolio but removed him from the Cabinet expenditure committee as well. [19]
Quigley nevertheless continued his attacks. In June the following year, he made a public denunciation of the government's policies, saying that the state should have a passive role in the economy while giving a speech to the Young Nationals in which he raised doubts about the government's Think Big growth strategy, which aimed to overcome crippling foreign exchange losses by using cheap power in the manufacture of steel, aluminium and timber products to export. [20] Subsequently, Muldoon told Quigley to attempt to prevent the editor of The Dominion from publishing the full transcript of the speech. Quigley declined, saying such an approach might be misinterpreted. Muldoon also told him that if he went through with his scheduled appearance on the Newsmakers current affairs programme that it would require his subsequent resignation. Yet again Quigley defied Muldoon and went on the show where he made no attempt at retracting his criticisms of government economic policy. [19] Muldoon and his allies reacted furiously to this continued public criticism with Muldoon saying that Quigley had "offended, embarrassed and angered his parliamentary colleagues" and that his speech had gone beyond what was acceptable from a cabinet minister. [20] Quigley was given the choice of either giving a public apology or resigning from Cabinet; he chose to resign. [21] [22]
After quitting the cabinet Quigley said he was considering leaving from Parliament altogether. This would have forced a by-election which could bring down the Muldoon Government, which only had a one-seat working majority. [20] Ultimately he did not resign his seat, to the relief of the National Party who were nervous at the prospect of defending it at a by-election. [19]
At the 1984 election, he resigned from politics altogether, becoming a business consultant. [8]
After leaving Parliament, his consultancy firm Strategos carried out some major consultancy jobs for the Lange government reviews of multiple government departments including Ministry of Defence, Treasury, Ministry of Justice and Police. When National won power in 1990, curiously, the government consultancy jobs his firm were being offered ceased. [23]
In 1994, Quigley re-entered the political arena, joining forces with Roger Douglas to form the ACT New Zealand party. The new MMP electoral system, which made it easier for smaller parties to win seats, convinced Quigley that a strongly free-market party could indeed be successful. In the 1996 election, the first conducted under MMP, Quigley was returned to Parliament as an ACT list MP. He unsuccessfully sought to be Speaker of the House, [24] and was instead appointed the chair of the Foreign Affairs, Defence and Trade Select Committee. Under Quigley's chairmanship, the select committee produced The Defence Beyond 2000 Report, which became the blueprint for the Clark government's radical restructuring of the New Zealand Defence Force.
Quigley did not stand for re-election in 1999 election and was immediately appointed by the incoming Prime Minister, Helen Clark, to review the contract the previous government had signed with the United States for New Zealand to acquire 28 near new F-16 fighter aircraft. Quigley advised the government to renegotiate the contract and acquire a lesser number of aircraft. One of his reasons for this recommendation was that cancellation of the contract would result in the abandonment of the RNZAF's air combat capability. The government disputed this and cancelled the contract. Two years later, it disbanded the RNZAF's air combat capability, just as predicted.
In early 2004 Quigley moved to Canberra to take up a position as a visiting fellow at ANU's Strategic & Defence Studies Centre. He researched and wrote on trans-Tasman and regional security issues and on the ongoing situation between the United States and New Zealand over the latter's anti-nuclear policy. [25]
In 1977, Quigley was awarded the Queen Elizabeth II Silver Jubilee Medal, and in 1990 he received the New Zealand 1990 Commemoration Medal. [1] In the 2004 New Year Honours, he was appointed a Companion of the Queen's Service Order for public services. [26]
Sir Keith Jacka Holyoake, was a New Zealand politician who served as the 26th prime minister of New Zealand, serving for a brief period in 1957 and then from 1960 to 1972, and also as the 13th governor-general of New Zealand, serving from 1977 to 1980. He is the only New Zealand politician to have held both positions.
Sir Robert David Muldoon was a New Zealand conservative politician who served as the 31st prime minister of New Zealand, from 1975 to 1984, while leader of the National Party. Departing from National Party convention, Muldoon was a right-wing populist and economic nationalist, with a distinctive public persona described as reactionary, aggressive, and abrasive.
James Brendan Bolger, affectionately called The Great Helmsman, is a New Zealand retired politician of the National Party who was the 35th prime minister of New Zealand, serving from 1990 to 1997.
The 1984 New Zealand general election was a nationwide vote to determine the composition of the 41st New Zealand Parliament. It marked the beginning of the Fourth Labour Government, with David Lange's Labour Party defeating the long-serving Prime Minister, Robert Muldoon, of the National Party. It was also the last election in which the Social Credit Party won seats as an independent entity. The election was also the only one in which the New Zealand Party, a protest party, played any substantial role.
Sir John Ross Marshall was a New Zealand politician of the National Party. He entered Parliament in 1946 and was first promoted to Cabinet in 1951. After spending twelve years as the deputy prime minister of New Zealand, he served as the 28th prime minister from February until December 1972.
Sir William Francis Birch, usually known as Bill Birch, is a New Zealand retired politician. He served as Minister of Finance from 1993 to 1999 in the fourth National Government.
Sir James Kenneth McLay is a New Zealand diplomat and former politician. He served as the ninth deputy prime minister of New Zealand from 15 March to 26 July 1984. McLay was also Leader of the National Party and Leader of the Opposition from 29 November 1984 to 26 March 1986. Following his ousting as party leader, he retired from parliamentary politics in 1987. In June 2009, he became New Zealand's Permanent Representative to the United Nations. In May 2015, McLay became New Zealand's Representative to the Palestinian Authority. From May 2016 to January 2017, he was New Zealand's Consul General in Honolulu.
George Frederick Gair was a New Zealand politician. He was once deputy leader of the National Party in the New Zealand Parliament, and was considered by many to be a possible contender for the leadership itself. He was known for his polite and diplomatic style, which often contrasted with the political situation around him – Michael Laws described him as "a refugee from the age of manners."
Sir Brian Edward Talboys was a New Zealand politician who served as the seventh deputy prime minister of New Zealand for the first two terms of Robert Muldoon's premiership. If the abortive "Colonels' Coup" against Muldoon had been successful, Talboys would have become Prime Minister himself.
Sir Ronald Macmillan Algie was a New Zealand politician who served as Speaker of the House of Representatives for six years in the 1960s. He described himself as "a Tory in the old tradition".
Richard James Gerard is a former New Zealand politician. He was a National Party Member of Parliament from 1984 to 1997.
Warren Ernest Cooper is a former New Zealand politician. He was a National Party MP from 1975 to 1996, holding cabinet positions including Minister of Foreign Affairs and Minister of Defence. Cooper also twice served as Mayor of Queenstown, from 1968 to 1975 and 1995 to 2001.
The New Zealand constitutional crisis of 1984 arose following the 1984 general election, and was caused by a major currency crisis. The crisis led the incoming government to review New Zealand's constitutional structures, which resulted in the Constitution Act 1986.
Dean Jack Eyre was a New Zealand politician of the National Party.
Hugh Campbell Templeton is a former New Zealand diplomat, politician and member of parliament for the National Party.
David Spence Thomson was a New Zealand politician of the National Party.
Eric Sidney Fostyn Holland was a New Zealand politician who served as an elected member of the House of Representatives from 1967 to 1981 for the National Party and as a Cabinet Minister in the second and third National governments.
Air Commodore Thomas Francis Gill, was a New Zealand air force pilot and politician. He flew with the Royal Air Force throughout the Second World War and afterwards served with the Royal New Zealand Air Force until 1969. He entered Parliament as a National Party MP in 1969 and served as a cabinet minister from 1975 to 1980, when he resigned to become New Zealand's Ambassador to the United States.
David Wilson was a New Zealand politician of the Labour Party. Through membership of the Legislative Council, he was a minister in the First Labour Government.
Thomas Philip Shand was a New Zealand politician of the National Party.
Derek Quigley -wikipedia nz.