1984 New Zealand National Party leadership election

The 1984 New Zealand National Party leadership election was held to determine the future leadership of the New Zealand National Party. The election was won by former Deputy Prime Minister Jim McLay.

1984 New Zealand National Party leadership election

29 November 1984
 
Candidate Jim McLay Jim Bolger Robert Muldoon
Popular vote 22 8 5
Percentage 62.85 22.85 14.28

Leader before election

Robert Muldoon

Leader after election

Jim McLay

Background

Muldoon's government was defeated in a landslide in the July 1984 election and there was widespread desire in the party for a leadership change. (It is unknown why this leadership election took place four months after the general election).

This desire came mainly from the younger and less conservative wing of the party, which saw Robert Muldoon as representing an era that had already passed.[1] Muldoon, however, refused to resign the leadership voluntarily, thereby forcing a direct leadership challenge. Two main candidates emerged for the leadership; Jim McLay, a more socially liberal and free market friendly candidate, and Jim Bolger who occupied the middle ground between Muldoon and McLay projecting himself as a compromise candidate.[2] Bill Birch and George Gair were the other initial candidates, Birch's support ultimately went to Bolger whilst Gair's backers would vote for McLay.[3]

Candidates

Jim McLay

By 1984 McLay had become a senior member of Muldoon's government. He had served as both Attorney General, Minister of Justice and later as Deputy Prime Minister upon the retirement of Duncan MacIntyre.[4] McLay was a distinct contrast to Muldoon, he promoted free market economic policies and possessed a relatively liberal social outlook. Indeed, he had been elected deputy due to his difference to Muldoon and building on this campaigned on winning back support from urban liberals and youth voters.[5] McLay had flirted with the prospect of the party leadership earlier in the year following Muldoon's refusal to act in accordance with the incoming governments wishes which triggered a constitutional crisis. McLay and several other senior cabinet ministers threatened to appeal to the Governor General to dismiss Muldoon in favour of McLay unless Muldoon enacted Labour's request to devalue the New Zealand Dollar. Muldoon backed down and thus had remained leader.[6]

Jim Bolger

Bolger, Minister of Labour under Muldoon, was seen by most as a more traditionalist and pragmatic candidate whilst being far less conservative than Muldoon. He had a traditionalist social views, but was more favourable to liberal economic policy.[5] Bolger had sided with McLay against Muldoon's refusal to act in accordance with the incoming government.[6]

Robert Muldoon

After losing the snap 1984 election Muldoon wished to remain as leader, confident that he could defeat Labour in the 1987 election and thus refused to resign as leader. He argued he should stay on at least until Labour's "honeymoon period" was over and made sure to point out that few of National's remaining MPs had experience in opposition.[7] Indeed, McLay had only served in government and Bolger had been an opposition MP for only one term in 1972-75. However, the mood for change within National's ranks became overbearing and forced a vote, though Muldoon still stood for the leadership, although he later admitted that he too felt he would lose.[3]

Result

The election was conducted through a members ballot by National's parliamentary caucus.[3] The following table gives the ballot results:

NameVotesPercentage
Jim McLay2262.85%
Jim Bolger822.85%
Robert Muldoon514.28%

Aftermath

Bolger was made deputy leader as a sign of party unity. Muldoon refused to accept any portfolios McLay offered him and became a backbencher. Muldoon was asked by journalists whether he was going to be a thorn in McLay's side, to which he replied "More like a little prick."[8] He refused McLay's offer of a front bench post, instead opting to return to the backbench for the first time in over two decades. However, he continued to openly agitate against McLay, refusing to withdraw into an "elder statesman" role as McLay wanted. The relationship between the two bottomed out when Muldoon criticised the entire party leadership, forcing McLay to demote him to the lowest rank in the National caucus. McLay wished for Muldoon to become an elder statesman to National (as Keith Holyoake had done years earlier) but Muldoon insisted on having an active role.[9]

McLay would lead National in opposition until 1986, when he was deposed by Bolger.

Notes

gollark: ...
gollark: No, only one of them was merge sort and it was #19.
gollark: #1: continuation passing style quicksort æ#2: weirdly done depth first search, as opposed to foolish non-omniscient ones#3: fake strassen#4: yes
gollark: I always do the cool ones.
gollark: I have a great algorithm this round, actually.

References

  • Gustafson, Barry (1986). The First 50 Years : A History of the New Zealand National Party. Auckland: Reed Methuen. ISBN 0-474-00177-6.CS1 maint: ref=harv (link)
  • Gustafson, Barry (2002). His Way: A Biography of Robert Muldoon. Auckland: Auckland University Press. ISBN 978-1-86940-236-5.CS1 maint: ref=harv (link)
  • Wilson, James Oakley (1985) [First published in 1913]. New Zealand Parliamentary Record, 1840–1984 (4th ed.). Wellington: V.R. Ward, Govt. Printer. OCLC 154283103.CS1 maint: ref=harv (link)

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