1988 New Zealand Labour Party leadership election

Summary

The 1988 New Zealand Labour Party leadership election was held on 21 December 1988. The incumbent leader of the New Zealand Labour Party David Lange was re-elected with 72% of the vote. To date it is the only instance when a sitting Prime Minister has been challenged for leadership in a caucus vote.[1]

1988 New Zealand Labour Party leadership election

← 1983 21 December 1988 1989 →
 
Candidate David Lange Roger Douglas
Popular vote 38 15
Percentage 69.09% 27.27%

Leader before election

David Lange

Leader after election

David Lange

Causes edit

After Labour's re-election at the 1987 election, an increasing rift opened up in the governing Labour Party between Prime Minister David Lange and Roger Douglas the Minister of Finance. Troubled by Douglas' idea of a flat tax and further Rogernomics reforms after the stock market crash in October 1987, Lange unilaterally put a halt to them in January 1988 while Douglas was out of the country in a press conference where he called for the nation to "have a cup of tea". In December 1988, Lange and Douglas' relationship bottomed out when Lange refused to renew the employment contract of Bevan Burgess, Douglas' press secretary, which was the major catalyst that led Douglas to decide leave Cabinet.[2] Douglas then wrote to Lange to tell him that he intended to tell the Labour caucus he could no longer serve in a government led by him. Lange construed this letter as a resignation.[3] Douglas was sacked as Minister of Finance and replaced with David Caygill. Douglas and his allies brought a leadership challenge to Lange, whom they regarded as in a weak position, having alienated both the left and right wings of the Labour Party. Caucus brought forward the vote from early 1989 to 21 December in order to avoid the issue dominating headlines over the new year holiday period when there would be little else to report on.[4]

Public opinion polling edit

Date Polling organisation Sample size David Lange Roger Douglas Mike Moore Geoffrey Palmer Unsure
19 December 1988 Heylen[5] 500 22% 18% 19% 16% 25%
H2H 47% 37% 16%
Lab. 43% 36% 21%

When asked for a choice between only Douglas or David Caygill for whom they preferred as finance minister 49 per cent chose Douglas and 27 per cent opted for Caygill.[5]

Result edit

Even though many Labour MPs supported the Rogernomics reforms, most weren't prepared to replace the charismatic and witty Lange for Douglas, who was a wooden speaker lacking the common touch. This resulted in Lange defeating Douglas by a wide margin of 38-15.[6] Lange commented that he never felt threatened that Douglas would defeat him and as expected, only the most loyal of Douglas' following supported him, such as Richard Prebble and Trevor De Cleene (The two of them with Douglas would later become known as the Three Musketeers). Two MPs (Jim Anderton and Kerry Burke) were not present and two votes were counted as informal votes.[7] Lange's victory can be summed up by a quote from Geoffrey Palmer who said that he regarded both as essential to the government's well-being.

Leadership ballot edit

Candidate Votes %
David Lange 38 69.09
Roger Douglas 15 27.27
Informal 2 3.63
Majority 23 41.81
Turnout 55

Caucus members support edit

Some, but not all, voting preferences were known:[7][8]

Douglas
Lange

Aftermath edit

Douglas congratulated Lange on his win and pledged loyalty to the caucus while stating he would still promote issues he believed in.[7] Several months after this election, the caucus re-elected Douglas to the cabinet in August 1989. Feeling that this served as a motion of no-confidence on his continued leadership, and feeling that he could no longer work with Douglas in cabinet, Lange resigned in August of that year to be replaced by Geoffrey Palmer.[9]

After his resignation, Lange served as Attorney-General (outside cabinet) from 1989 to 1990 and later a backbencher until retiring from Parliament in 1996. Douglas was appointed Minister of Police and Minister of Immigration by Palmer but chose not to contest the 1990 election. Later, in 1994, he co-founded with former National Party MP Derek Quigley the Association of Consumers and Taxpayers which would go on to become ACT New Zealand. Douglas returned to parliament again in 2008 and stood down in 2011.

Notes edit

  1. ^ Bassett 2008, p. 462.
  2. ^ Goulter, John (7 December 1988). "PM sacks Douglas's chief press secretary". The Evening Post. p. 1.
  3. ^ Bassett 2008, pp. 455–456.
  4. ^ Cullen, Michael (20 June 2021). "Michael Cullen on the end of the Fourth Labour Government". Stuff. Retrieved 22 August 2021.
  5. ^ a b "Voter support splits 4 ways". The Dominion. 21 December 1988. p. 1.
  6. ^ Bassett 2008, p. 463.
  7. ^ a b c Munro, Mike (22 December 1988). "Douglas's comments spur suspension calls". The Dominion. p. 2.
  8. ^ Bassett 2008, p. 462-4.
  9. ^ Lange 2005, pp. 271–2.

References edit