Minister of Trade (New Zealand)
The Minister of Trade in New Zealand is the cabinet member appointed by the Prime Minister to be in charge of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Trade (MFAT). The current Minister of Trade is David Parker.[2]
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Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Trade | |
Style | The Honourable |
---|---|
Member of | |
Reports to | Prime Minister of New Zealand |
Appointer | Governor-General of New Zealand |
Term length | At Her Majesty's pleasure |
Formation | 1960 |
First holder | Jack Marshall as Minister of Overseas Trade |
Salary | $288,900[1] |
Website | www.beehive.govt.nz |
List of ministers
The following ministers have held the office of Minister of Trade.[3]
- Key
No. | Name | Portrait | Term of Office | Prime Minister | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Jack Marshall | ![]() |
12 December 1960 | 9 February 1972 | Holyoake | ||
2 | Brian Talboys | ![]() |
9 February 1972 | 7 November 1972 | Marshall | ||
3 | Joe Walding | ![]() |
8 December 1972 | 12 December 1975 | Kirk | ||
Rowling | |||||||
(2) | Brian Talboys | ![]() |
12 December 1975 | 11 December 1981 | Muldoon | ||
4 | Warren Cooper | ![]() |
11 December 1981 | 26 July 1984 | |||
5 | Mike Moore | ![]() |
26 July 1984 | 2 November 1990 | Lange | ||
Palmer | |||||||
Moore | |||||||
6 | Don McKinnon | ![]() |
2 November 1990 | 16 December 1996 | Bolger | ||
7 | Lockwood Smith | ![]() |
16 December 1996 | 10 December 1999 | |||
Shipley | |||||||
8 | Jim Sutton | ![]() |
10 December 1999 | 19 October 2005 | Clark | ||
9 | Phil Goff | ![]() |
19 October 2005 | 19 November 2008 | |||
10 | Tim Groser | ![]() |
19 November 2008 | 14 December 2015 | Key | ||
11 | Todd McClay | ![]() |
14 December 2015 | 26 October 2017 | |||
English | |||||||
12 | David Parker | ![]() |
26 October 2017 | present | Ardern |
Notes
- "Parliamentary Salaries and Allowances Determination 2016" (PDF). Parliament.nz. Retrieved 20 January 2017.
- "Ministerial List". Department of the Prime Minister and Cabinet (New Zealand). Retrieved 13 November 2014.
- Wilson 1985, pp. 89–97.
gollark: You should, if you care, probably at least run it through an obufscator for .NET.
gollark: > 5. .net platform is cracker / hacker friendly Any program running on the client can INEVITABLY be reverse-engineered. Do not rely on it not experiencing that, because you will fail.
gollark: > 4. XAML - the incredibly messy UI technologyPerhaps, but this is not a *language* thing.
gollark: > 3. Garbage collector and memory leak detection tools?Again, not sure if anyone actually runs into this sort of issue in practice.
gollark: > 1. Performance penalties.> [some rambling about C++].NET is generally pretty much *fast enough*. If your application somehow hits performance bottlenecks, rewrite the slow bits in native code, don't just immediately take a development speed hit.> 2. Need to interoperate with C++ / Native (Windows) API’sI don't know how often you actually need to bind to a native API not wrapped by .NET or a third-party library, but you can do it, it's just annoying - but probably less than using C++ for everything!
References
- 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)
External links
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