- Don McKinnon
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This article is about a New Zealand politician. For other people with the same name, see Don McKinnon (disambiguation).
The Right Honourable
Sir Donald McKinnon
ONZ GCVO4th Commonwealth Secretary-General In office
1 April 2000 – 1 April 2008Preceded by Emeka Anyaoku Succeeded by Kamalesh Sharma 12th Deputy Prime Minister of New Zealand In office
2 November 1990 – 16 December 1996Prime Minister Jim Bolger Preceded by Helen Clark Succeeded by Winston Peters 24th Minister of Foreign Affairs In office
2 November 1990 – 5 December 1999Prime Minister Jim Bolger (1990–1997)
Jenny Shipley (1997–1999)Preceded by Mike Moore Succeeded by Phil Goff Member of Parliament for Albany In office
1978–1993Preceded by Seat established Succeeded by Murray McCully Personal details Born 27 February 1939
London, United KingdomPolitical party National Spouse(s) Clare de Lore Sir Donald Charles "Don" McKinnon, ONZ, GCVO (born 27 February 1939) is a former Deputy Prime Minister and Minister of Foreign Affairs of New Zealand. He was the Secretary-General of the Commonwealth of Nations from 2000 until 2008.
Contents
Early life
McKinnon was born in Blackheath, London. His father was Major-General Walter McKinnon, CB CBE, a New Zealand Chief of the General Staff, and once Chairman of New Zealand Broadcasting. McKinnon's brothers include the twins John McKinnon, the current New Zealand Secretary of Defence and a former Ambassador to China, and Malcolm McKinnon, an editor and academic, and Ian McKinnon, Pro-Chancellor of Victoria University of Wellington and the current Deputy Mayor of Wellington City. The McKinnon brothers are great-great-grandsons of John Plimmer, known as the father of Wellington.[1]
McKinnon was educated at Nelson College and in Washington, D.C. before eventually undertaking study at Lincoln Agricultural College, New Zealand. After leaving university, he became a farm manager, and later a farm management consultant. In 1974, he became a real estate agent. In his spare time, he also worked as a rehabilitation tutor in prisons.
Member of Parliament
Parliament of New Zealand Years Term Electorate List Party 1978–1981 39th Albany National 1981–1984 40th Albany National 1984–1987 41st Rodney National 1987–1990 42nd Albany National 1990–1993 43rd Albany National 1993–1996 44th Albany National 1996–1999 45th List 2 National 1999–2000 46th List 3 National In the elections of 1969 and 1972, McKinnon stood unsuccessfully as the National Party's candidate in the Birkenhead electorate, having previously served on two of the party's electorate committees. In the election of 1978, McKinnon won the newly established seat of Albany, which covered much of the same area.
In 1980, McKinnon was made the government's junior Whip. Two years later, he was made senior Whip. When Prime Minister Robert Muldoon called the snap election of 1984, and was defeated by David Lange's New Zealand Labour Party, McKinnon remained senior Whip for his party in Opposition. In September 1987, he became deputy leader of the National Party.
Cabinet minister
When National, then led by Jim Bolger, won the 1990 elections, McKinnon became Deputy Prime Minister. He also became Minister of Foreign Affairs and Trade and Minister of Pacific Island Affairs. During his tenure in the former role, he oversaw New Zealand's election to the UN Security Council, increased activity in the Commonwealth of Nations, and attempts to broker a truce on the island of Bougainville. He received recognition as a result of the Bougainville negotiations.
In 1996, the National Party required the support of the New Zealand First party to form a government, and part of the coalition agreement gave the office of Deputy Prime Minister to New Zealand First leader Winston Peters. McKinnon kept his role as Minister of Foreign Affairs, however, and also became Minister for Disarmament and Arms Control. When the coalition with New Zealand First collapsed, McKinnon did not resume the Deputy Prime Minister's role (this being taken up by Wyatt Creech), although he did gain the minor responsibility of Minister in Charge of War Pensions. McKinnon retired from parliament shortly after the 1999 elections, being replaced by Arthur Anae. He now sits on the Board of Advisors of the Global Panel Foundation.
Secretary-General of the Commonwealth
During his time as New Zealand's Minister of Foreign Affairs, McKinnon had been highly involved with the Commonwealth. At the Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting 1999 (CHOGM), in Durban, he was elected to the office of Secretary General. Since that time, he has had to deal with issues such as Zimbabwe's Robert Mugabe and George Speight's attempted nationalist coup in Fiji. McKinnon has also placed an emphasis on supporting "good governance".
In late 2003, New Zealand media reported that Zimbabwe was attempting to gather support from other Commonwealth members to remove McKinnon from the office of Secretary-General, presumably in retaliation for McKinnon's views about the issue of Zimbabwean democracy. The government of Zimbabwe denied that it was making any such efforts.
At the opening of the 2003 CHOGM, in Nigeria on 5 December, McKinnon was challenged for the position of Secretary-General by Lakshman Kadirgamar, a former Foreign Minister of Sri Lanka. However, McKinnon defeated Kadirgamar in a vote reported to be 40-11 in McKinnon's favour.
In 2007 McKinnon attempted to mediate between Fiji and the Australian and New Zealand governments in their continuing dispute over the appropriate timetable and rules for the holding of Fijian elections in 2008.[2]
In 2009, McKinnon was appointed Knight Grand Cross of the Royal Victorian Order (GCVO) by the Queen, for services to the Commonwealth.[3] He is a Vice-President of the Royal Commonwealth Society.
Controversy
McKinnon has often taken positions on issues that are at variance with the consensus of Commonwealth member states, not least that of the New Zealand government. In a speech to the 2005 CHOGM in Malta, McKinnon caused controversy when he appeared to say economic development and free trade are more important than democracy. In a 2007 interview he criticised British public support for evicted white farmers in Zimbabwe as being "a bit of a guilt thing" and argued that the evictions were justified as there was "no way you can justify a society where 15,000 white farmers control 80 percent of the most fertile land".[4]
Legacy
There is a street, Don McKinnon Drive, named after him in his former electorate of Albany.
Personal life
McKinnon is married to his second wife, former journalist Clare de Lore.[5]
Footnotes
- ^ Dominion Post 18 June 2009 page C2
- ^ Manning, Selwyn. "McKinnon moves to resolve Clark Bainimarama scrap". Scoop. 15 October 2007.
- ^ "The Queen appoints former Commonwealth Secretary-General, Don McKinnon, as GCVO". Buckingham Palace. 9 March 2009. http://www.royal.gov.uk/LatestNewsandDiary/Pressreleases/2009/TheQueenappointsformerCommonwealthSecretaryGeneral.aspx. Retrieved 2009-03-11.
- ^ Ralston, Bill (14–20 April 2007). "The seven-year itch". New Zealand Listener 208 (3492). http://www.listener.co.nz/issue/3492/features/8597/the_seven-year_itch.html;jsessionid=ECD6F23B3610C08D127B7A445A3E4813.
- ^ Hewitson, Michele (5 June 2010). "Michele Hewitson Interview: Don McKinnon". The New Zealand Herald. http://www.nzherald.co.nz/nz/news/article.cfm?c_id=1&objectid=10649843. Retrieved 8 September 2010.
External links
Political offices Preceded by
Chief Emeka AnyaokuSecretary-General for the Commonwealth
2000–2008Succeeded by
Kamalesh SharmaPreceded by
Mike MooreMinister of Foreign Affairs
1990–1999Succeeded by
Phil GoffArnold Smith · Sir Shridath Ramphal · Chief Emeka Anyaoku · Don McKinnon · Kamalesh Sharma
Categories:- 1939 births
- Living people
- Commonwealth Secretaries-General
- Members of the Privy Council of the United Kingdom
- New Zealand foreign ministers
- New Zealand National Party MPs
- Members of the Cabinet of New Zealand
- People from Nelson, New Zealand
- Lincoln University (New Zealand) alumni
- Knights Grand Cross of the Royal Victorian Order
- Members of the Order of New Zealand
- Former students of Nelson College
- New Zealand list MPs
- Presidents of the United Nations Security Council
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