Fraternity Manuals

Minister of Foreign Affairs (New Zealand)

From Open Encyclopedia

Politics - Politics portal

New Zealand

Image:New zealand coa.png
This article is part of the series:
Politics and government of
New Zealand

Constitution
Parliament
Cabinet

Queen: Elizabeth II
Governor-General: Silvia Cartwright
Prime Minister: Helen Clark
Dep. Prime Minister: Michael Cullen
Ministers
Speaker of the House
Leader of the Opposition
Official Opposition

Politicians
Political parties
Political topics
Supreme Court
State sector
Regional authorities
Elections
Electoral system
Electorates
Māori politics

edit

The Minister of Foreign Affairs is a major portfolio in the Cabinet of New Zealand.

The present Minister is the Rt Hon. Winston Peters, who was created Minister outside cabinet following the 2005 elections. Also linked to the portfolio are the separate roles of Minister for Disarmament and Arms Control and Minister for Trade Negotiations which are now held by Peters' predecessor, the Hon. Phil Goff. Under a special agreement, Peters reports directly to the Prime Minister instead of the Cabinet.

Contents

Responsibilities and powers

The Minister of Foreign Affairs is responsible for overseeing New Zealand's relations with foreign countries. The Minister is in charge of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Trade, including New Zealand's diplomatic staff. The office is often considered to be one of the more distinguished ministerial posts, and has at times been counted as the most senior role below that of the Prime Minister. In terms of actual political power, however, the Minister of Foreign Affairs is not prominent, with the Minister of Finance being considerably more influential.

History

The first New Zealand foreign minister was James Allen, appointed to the post of "Minister of External Affairs" by William Massey in 1919. Before this time, there was no dedicated ministerial portfolio for foreign relations. At a later date, the title was changed to "Minister of Foreign Affairs". When the Ministry of Foreign Affairs absorbed responsibility for trade negotiations, the title formally became "Minister of Foreign Affairs and Trade". In 2005, however, responsibility for trade was split away into a separate portfolio, with the title reverting simply to "Minister of Foreign Affairs".

Historically, it has been common for Prime Ministers to take on the role of Foreign Minister themselves, particularly if they have an interest in the field. The most recent Prime Minister to do this was Mike Moore, in 1990. In total, thirteen Prime Ministers have served as Foreign Minister for all or part of their terms.

New Zealand has had twenty-six foreign ministers (regardless of exact title) since the post was first created. The longest-serving foreign minister was Keith Holyoake, who held the post for the duration of his eleven-year premiership. The second longest-serving foreign minister, and the longest-serving foreign minister who was not also Prime Minister, was Don McKinnon, who later became Commonwealth Secretary-General.

List of Foreign Ministers

Name PM Served Took Office Left Office Party
1 James Allen Massey 24 November 1919 28 April 1920 Reform
2 Ernest Page Lee Massey 17 May 1920 13 January 1923 Reform
3 Francis Bell Massey, (himself), Coates 18 June 1923 24 May 1926 Reform
4 William Nosworthy Coates 24 May 1926 24 August 1928 Reform
5 Gordon Coates (himself) 25 August 1928 10 December 1928 Reform
6 Joseph Ward (himself) 10 December 1928 28 May 1930 United (Liberal)
7 George William Forbes (himself) 28 May 1930 6 December 1935 United (Liberal)
8 Michael Joseph Savage (himself) 6 December 1935 27 March 1940 Labour
9 Frank Langstone Fraser 1 April 1940 21 December 1942 Labour
10 Peter Fraser (himself) 7 July 1943 13 December 1949 Labour
11 Frederick Doidge Holland 13 December 1949 31 August 1951 National
12 Thomas Webb Holland 19 September 1951 26 November 1954 National
13 Thomas MacDonald Holland, Holyoake 26 November 1954 12 December 1957 National
14 Walter Nash (himself) 12 December 1957 12 December 1960 Labour
15 Keith Holyoake (himself) 12 December 1960 7 February 1972 National
16 Jack Marshall (himself) 7 February 1972 8 December 1972 National
17 Norman Kirk (himself) 8 December 1972 31 August 1974 Labour
18 Bill Rowling (himself) 6 September 1974 12 December 1975 Labour
19 Brian Talboys Muldoon 12 December 1975 11 December 1981 National
20 Warren Cooper Muldoon 11 December 1981 26 July 1984 National
21 David Lange (himself) 26 July 1984 24 August 1987 Labour
22 Russell Marshall Lange, Palmer 24 August 1987 9 February 1990 Labour
23 Mike Moore Palmer, (himself) 9 February 1990 2 November 1990 Labour
24 Don McKinnon Bolger, Shipley 2 November 1990 5 December 1999 National
25 Phil Goff Clark 5 December 1999 19 October 2005 Labour
26 Winston Peters Clark 19 October 2005 (present) New Zealand First

External links

MediaWiki GNU Free Documentation License 1.2