Bill Skate

Sir William Jack "Bill" Skate, KCMG (26 September 1953 – 3 January 2006) was a prominent Papua New Guinea politician. He was the son of an Australian father and a Papua New Guinean mother. Though his career was turbulent and often marked by setbacks, he served in the highest posts in his country: Prime Minister, Speaker of the National Parliament, and acting Governor-General.


Sir Bill Skate

KCMG
6th Prime Minister of Papua New Guinea
In office
22 July 1997  14 July 1999
MonarchElizabeth II
Governor GeneralSir Wiwa Korowi
Sir Silas Atopare
Preceded bySir Julius Chan
Succeeded byMekere Morauta
Personal details
Born
William Jack Skate

(1953-09-26)26 September 1953
Papua New Guinea
Died3 January 2006(2006-01-03) (aged 52)
Brisbane, Australia
Political partyPeople's National Congress Party

Life

Skate became manager of the capital district commission in 1987. He was elected to parliament in 1992 and served as speaker from 1992 to 1994, supporting the government of Paias Wingti.

Skate served as governor of the National Capital District from 1995 to 1997. He was prime minister from 1997 to 1999 and resigned after 18 months, fearing that he would lose a challenge. In 2002, his political party the People's National Congress Party (PNC) became a coalition partner in the government of Michael Somare and Skate became Speaker of the National Parliament. He was appointed acting governor-general in November 2003, a constitutional requirement when that office falls vacant. Sir Pato Kakeraya was scheduled to take up the office on 20 January 2004, but Skate continued to act in the office because of court challenges to Kakeraya's election.

On 3 March 2004, Skate was suspended as acting governor-general because of allegations that he misappropriated funds during the 1990s. He then advised the Prime Minister to appoint a cabinet minister as acting governor-general. The following day, however, he was cleared of the financial charges in court, and he became acting governor-general again. In May 2004, his party left the coalition when he and other members refused to support a constitutional amendment supported by Somare which would have given the government more time to be immune to no-confidence votes. As a result, the PNC became the largest opposition party.

On 28 May 2004, Skate ceased to be Speaker when the parliament elected a pro-government candidate, Jeffrey Nape. The office of governor-general was still vacant at that stage, so Nape automatically succeeded Skate as acting governor-general.

Bill Skate was knighted in January 2005 for services to parliament, becoming Sir William Skate.

He died in hospital on 3 January 2006, in Brisbane, Australia, where he had been airlifted after suffering a stroke in late December 2005 which was probably an effect of chronic alcoholism. He was buried in Port Moresby. He was the first Papua New Guinean prime minister to die.

gollark: I mean, carbon dioxide is an externality. And economics generally says you should tax those.
gollark: Nuclear cars are the future of cars. Just have a big lump of plutonium to heat up water to drive turbines.
gollark: We should ban all cars which do not run on nuclear power.
gollark: I think only city centres probably will in practice.
gollark: A cool but also still impractical alternative to batteries for solar would just be to have a giant ring of solar panels around the planet, linked with superconductors.

References

    Political offices
    Preceded by
    Sir Julius Chan
    Prime Minister of Papua New Guinea
    1997–1999
    Succeeded by
    Sir Mekere Morauta
    Preceded by
    Sir Silas Atopare
    Governor-General of Papua New Guinea (acting)
    2003–2004
    Succeeded by
    Jeffrey Nape (acting)
    National Parliament of Papua New Guinea
    Preceded by
    Dennis Young
    Speaker of the National Parliament of Papua New Guinea
    1992–1994
    Succeeded by
    Rabbie Namaliu
    Preceded by
    Bernard Narokobi
    Speaker of the National Parliament of Papua New Guinea
    2002–2004
    Succeeded by
    Jeffrey Nape
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