Palmer: warts-and-all account of tireless reformer
university-of-canterbury
Wed Nov 17 2010 13:00:00 GMT+1300 (New Zealand Daylight Time)
Palmer: warts-and-all account of tireless reformer
Wednesday, 17 November 2010, 2:38 pm
Press Release: University of Canterbury
Biography of former PM a warts-and-all account of tireless reformer
A fascinating warts-and-all account of the political career of New Zealand’s 33rd prime minister will be launched in the capital this evening by Canterbury University Press.
Palmer: The Parliamentary Years is the product of research by historian Dr Raymond Richards involving more than 200 linear metres of archives, as well as interviews with Sir Geoffrey Palmer, his family and associates.
Currently the President of the country’s Law Commission and New Zealand’s representative on the International Whaling Commission, Sir Geoffrey was “the key law maker in the most reforming government in New Zealand history”.
“As the Deputy Prime Minister then the Prime Minister, he managed the government’s legislative programme, initiated several major reforms, negotiated with US officials about visits by nuclear warships, and helped to keep the fourth Labour government working as its internal divisions grew,” said Dr Richards, senior lecturer in history at the University of Waikato.
The political biography reveals, from his formative years in Nelson, what shaped Sir Geoffrey, the extent of his influence, and the achievements and limitations of his parliamentary career.
Educated at Victoria University of Wellington and the University of Chicago law school, Sir Geoffrey planned to use legal means to effect social reform when he entered parliament in 1979 as a member of parliament for Christchurch Central.
Advertisement - scroll to continue reading
Through hard work and high intelligence, Sir Geoffrey (who became Deputy Prime Minister in 1984 and held office as New Zealand’s 33rd prime minister for 13 months, 1989-1990) compiled a record of reform unmatched in this country’s history, concerning parliamentary procedures, the voting system, the environment, longstanding Māori grievances, the Bill of Rights, economic reform and many other matters, big and small.
Dr Richards said he was “greatly impressed” by Sir Geoffrey’s “energy and relentless work habits”.
“He was the hardest working of a cabinet of workaholics. I was impressed by the intelligence he brought and his impressive efforts to resolve disputes where there were clashes of ideas.”
Dr Richards said while researching and writing the book he found “the private Geoffrey Palmer a lot more relaxed than the public Geoffrey Palmer. He always looked a bit awkward in public. I also learned about the extent of the American influence on what he did. He studied at the University of Chicago law school and came back with many American ideas about constitutional issues, freedom of speech, a Bill of Rights. And I discovered the extent to which his career was a reaction to [the politics of Robert] Muldoon.”
Dr Richards said he hoped his biography would redress the fact that a lot of Sir Geoffrey’s achievements have been overlooked or are simply unknown. With much of his time at the top of the political ladder spent as deputy to David Lange, much of Palmer’s work was “behind the scenes”, Dr Richards said. “He was the glue that held everything together and his organisational and diplomatic skills were a good foil for Lange’s disordered brilliance.”
Sir Geoffrey did not read the manuscript of the book before it went to print, which Dr Richards said allowed him to write an independent account – an account that his subject said should be “warts and all”.
Dr Richards said the “warts” laid bare in the book include Sir Geoffrey’s “blind spot on compulsory unionism”, his unquestioning faith in the legal system and his leadership limitations.
“He had great faith in the legal system which led him to overvalue it. He kept forgetting that the legal route was not always the way to solve problems. And as a leader he had limitations. He was not a man of the people but tried to appear one. It didn’t work.”
Palmer: The Parliamentary Years will be launched by Phil Goff at the Grand Hall, Parliament, this evening (Wednesday 17 November).
• Palmer: The Parliamentary Years, by Raymond Richards, published by Canterbury University Press, November 2010, RRP NZ$45, Paperback, 234 x 153 mm 472 pp, 12 pp b/w photographs, ISBN 978-1877257-92-6.
ENDS
Advertisement - scroll to continue reading
a.supporter:hover {background:#EC4438!important;} @media screen and (max-width: 480px) { #byline-block div.byline-block {padding-right:16px;}}
Using Scoop for work?
Scoop is free for personal use, but you’ll need a licence for work use. This is part of our Ethical Paywall and how we fund Scoop. Join today with plans starting from less than $3 per week, plus gain access to exclusive Pro features.
Join Pro Individual Find out more
Find more from University of Canterbury on InfoPages.