As Reserve Bank governor in 2001, Don gave a speech to the Knowledge Wave conference laying out his plan for restoring New Zealand's living standards. Less than a year later, he was in Parliament vigorously advocating the need to close the income gap with Australia.
Just 15 months after entering Parliament, he was elected Leader of the National Party and in that capacity was Leader of the Opposition, a position he held for a little over three years.
He focused attention on five main themes:
The need to reverse the gradual decline in New Zealand’s living standards relative to those in countries to which New Zealanders can readily move by getting the right policies on taxation, regulation, and infrastructure;
The importance of reminding New Zealanders that the Treaty of Waitangi did not promote one race above another, or entrench a right to separate Parliamentary representation, but rather guaranteed all New Zealanders the “rights and privileges of British subjects”;
The need to improve the quality of our education system, especially the need to improve basic literacy and numeracy, to ensure that all New Zealanders have the ability to function well in a modern society;
The need to reform the welfare system, to avoid the demoralising effects of entrenched dependency;
and the need to ensure that all New Zealanders can feel secure – secure from external attack and from internal crime.
These themes resonated with many New Zealanders, with the result that National’s share of the party vote almost doubled from 20.9% in the 2002 election to 39.1% in the 2005 election, National’s highest share of the vote since the First Past the Post election of 1990.
This page sets out the main speeches from Don’s time in the National Party - as a candidate and then as a Member of Parliament for the National Party.
Photographs (from top): Striking billboards designed by John Ansell were a major feature of the 2005 campaign; Nathan Guy presents a large bundle of Transmission Gully petitions; Announcing National's environment policy at the Karori Wildlife Sanctury with Nick Smith
An address to the Orewa Rotary Club
In the words of the old poem, I am both surprised and pleased to have been inducted into the NBR Business Hall of Fame.
Don's personal credo
An address to The Evolving Debates, Auckland
An address to the annual convention of the Financial Planners and Insurance Advisers Association
Copyright © 2024 Don Brash.