- Neil Kirton
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Neil Kirton is a former New Zealand politician.[1] He was an MP from 1996 to 1999, first as a member of the New Zealand First party and then as an independent. Before the splintering of New Zealand First, he was known as its leading dissident.
Member of Parliament
Parliament of New Zealand Years Term Electorate List Party 1996–98 45th List 12 NZ First 1998–99 Changed allegiance to: Independent Kirton was first elected to Parliament in the 1996 elections as a New Zealand First list MP, and when New Zealand First formed a coalition with the governing National Party, Kirton was appointed Associate Minister of Health. Kirton soon became disillusioned with this arrangement, however, disliking the National Party's health policies. He became increasingly critical of his party's coalition with National, and in August 1997, he was fired from his role as Associate Minister of Health after quarreling bitterly with the Minister of Health, Bill English. Kirton accused English of breaching the coalition agreement between National and New Zealand First, and called National "untrustworthy" and "deceitful". He then launched an unsuccessful campaign within New Zealand First to break off the coalition and come to an arrangement with the Labour Party.
On 24 October, it was announced that Kirton would not be seeking renomination for the New Zealand First party, with Kirton saying that the party had lost its principles. Kirton did not resign from the party, however, deciding to remain a member until the end of the Parliamentary term. He therefore remained a dissident, and frequently criticised the party's leader, Winston Peters. He also continued to attack National's health policies. He attacked his replacement as Associate Minister of Health, New Zealand First's Tuariki Delamere, as a liar, and accused him of tamely accepting whatever the National Party wished.
By the middle of the following year, however, matters had reached the point where Kirton's position in the party was no longer tenable, and on 28 July 1998, Kirton quit the party to became an independent. This deprived the government of its majority, leaving Parliament evenly split between the government and the opposition. As a result, the government was forced to do a deal with the United New Zealand party. Later, when the coalition between New Zealand First and National finally collapsed, the government's majority became even more precarious, but it nevertheless managed to survive until the end of the term.
Local politics
Kirton did not seek re-election in the 1999 elections, instead going into local politics. He was elected as the top-polling candidate in the Napier ward for both the 2002, 2005 and 2008 local body elections on the Hawke's Bay Regional Council. He is currently a Victim Support regional manager.
References
- ^ Kathy Marks (27 September 1999). "Experimental bomb to create huge tidal wave was tested in 1944". The Independent. http://www.independent.co.uk/news/experimental-bomb-to-create-huge-tidal-wave-was-tested-in-1944-1122610.html. Retrieved 2011-01-03. "Neil Kirton, a former colleague of Professor Leech, told the New Zealand Herald that the experiments involved laying a pattern of explosives underwater to create a tidal wave."
New Zealand First Party leaders Party Presidents Doug Woolerton · Dail Jones · George Groombridge
Deputy Leaders Former Parliamentarians Winston Peters · Tau Henare · Michael Laws · Jack Elder · Peter McCardle · Rana Waitai · Tuku Morgan · Tuariki Delamere · Tu Wyllie · Ann Batten · Jenny Bloxham · Brian Donnelly · Doug Woolerton · Deborah Morris · Ron Mark · Neil Kirton · Peter Brown · Robyn McDonald · Gilbert Myles · Barbara Stewart · Pita Paraone · Craig McNair · Jim Peters · Dail Jones · Edwin Perry · Bill Gudgeon · Brent Catchpole
Other Articles Categories:- New Zealand First MPs
- Living people
- Members of the Cabinet of New Zealand
- People from Napier, New Zealand
- Independent MPs of New Zealand
- New Zealand list MPs
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