Africa | America | Asia | Australasia | Europe | India | Middle East | UK | US

PEOPLE: New Zealand's new prime minister is poor boy made good,

Posted : Sat, 08 Nov 2008 10:30:22 GMT
By : DPA
Category : Australasia (World)
News Alerts by Email ( click here )
Australasia World News | Home
Wellington - New Zealand's new Prime Minister, John Key, 47, who steered his conservative National Party to victory in Saturday's general election, is a classic example of a poor boy made good. Brought up by his mother in a state house after his alcoholic father died when he was seven, he made a fortune overseas as a foreign currency dealer before returning home to enter parliament a multi-millionaire and its richest member.

He credits his success to his Jewish mother, an Austrian who fled Vienna in 1939 and worked as a cleaner to get him through university, after rejecting advice to declare bankruptcy to avoid the debts her husband left behind.

Key has had a meteoric rise to the top with just six years in parliament and will be the most inexperienced prime minister in over a century.

Shrugging off taunts by Labour's acerbic former finance minister Michael Cullen, who called him "a rich prick," the softly spoken Key has maintained a somewhat bland "nice guy" image in parliament.

He has confessed that even when he had to help sack 500 staff as part of a savage worldwide retrenchment by the Merrill Lynch bank he did it in such a way that they called him "the smiling assassin."

Married with two children, Key was fascinated by politics as a boy but was determined to make a lot of money first so that he could be financially independent.

That money has allowed him to buy two multi-million dollar homes in Auckland (residence and weekend cottage), one in Hawaii and an apartment in London - not the usual property portfolio of a New Zealand politician.

Key's opponents have dubbed him "slippery" for a series of policy flip flops which they said indicated a lack of political conviction, leaving them not knowing what he actually stands for.

He unwittingly fostered this belief when he said that he had held "no strong view" about the all-white South African rugby tour of New Zealand in 1981 - an explosive issue that bitterly divided his multi-racial country, provoking battles in the streets.

Key admits to changing his mind on some issues - including reversing a 2003 opinion that New Zealand should have joined the US-led invasion of Iraq. "The fact that I'm in tune with public opinion doesn't mean that I'm slippery," he says.

Throughout the election campaign Labour painted Key as an impassive front man for radical right-wingers in his National Party who were using him to reassure an electorate suspicious of extreme conservative policies.

As he deliberately moved his party to the centre after taking over the leadership two years ago, he was attacked as a closet Socialist by the right wing ACT party, who favour slashing welfare in favour of self-reliance.

Although his party's manifesto reflects conservative policies like tax cuts, reduced government spending and greater use of the private sector, Key paints himself as a compassionate pragmatist.

"There will always be a social welfare system in New Zealand because you can measure a society by how it looks after its most vulnerable," he says. "Once, I was one of them. I will never turn my back on that."

Copyright DPA

Share/Save/Bookmark

Article : PEOPLE: New Zealand's new prime minister is poor boy made good,
Print this article
Email this article

Stay Updated
News gadget on your Google homepage
Subscribe to a news feed in Google Reader


Related News

Australia edges closer to carbon-trading scheme - Summary
Sydney - Australian Prime Minister Kevin Rudd could get his wish and have legislation for a national carbon-trading scheme through Parliament before he attends next month's climate conference in Copenhagen. Rudd's Labor government on Tuesday sealed a...

Australian doctors marvel as separated twins eat, sleep, play
Sydney - The Bangladeshi conjoined twins separated in a marathon operation in Australia last week are eating, watching videos and playing like other infants their age, doctors at Melbourne's Royal Children's Hospital said Tuesday. They are both still...

Wheelchair banned - Paralympian crawls through Australian airport
Sydney - Paralympic champion Kurt Fearnley said Tuesday he was so angry at having to leave his wheelchair at the check-in counter he crawled through Brisbane airport to reach the departure gate for his flight. Fearnley, who earlier this month won his...

Australian drug runners using dead kangaroos
Sydney - Drugs are being smuggled into Aboriginal communities in Australia's far north inside dead kangaroos, the Northern Territory parliament was told Tuesday. Former indigenous affairs minister Alison Anderson said cannabis was being sewn inside k...

Lucky, the world's oldest sheep, dead at 23
Sydney - Lucky, a ewe who got into the Guinness Book of World Records two years ago for being the world's oldest sheep, has died at the Australian farm where she was born 23 years ago, news reports said Tuesday. Delrae Westgarth, who adopted Lucky af...

Hive heist stings New Zealand beekeeper
Wellington - A New Zealand beekeeper has been stung by rustlers who stole more than a million of his honey producers in 28 hives from a farm paddock, a newspaper reported on Tuesday. John Tyler, of Matamata, 55 kilometres from Rotorua in the central ...

Australia edges closer to carbon-trading scheme
Sydney - Australian Prime Minister Kevin Rudd could get his wish and have legislation for a national carbon-trading scheme through Parliament before he attends next month's climate conference in Copenhagen. Rudd's Labor government on Tuesday sealed a...

Have your Say
Name
Email
Subject
Your Comment

Enter Verification code
 
  

 

 

More Australasia (World) News click here
Follow The Earth Times
Subscribe to RSS Follow Earth Times on TwitterNews by email
Share/Save/Bookmark

 
 



 
Subscribe to free Earthtimes
News Alerts by Email Click here
For RSS Feeds Click here
or Create your own RSS

Add to Google Toolbar
Breaking News
Press Releases

 


The Earth Times
News Category

© 2009 www.earthtimes.org, The Earth Times, All Rights Reserved | Privacy Policy
Earth Times accept no responsibility or liability either directly or indirectly for views or opinions expressed in articles or comments.