Lamburgers, pungent one-liners, and other memories of Mike Moore

4:34 pm on 3 February 2020

By Geoffrey Palmer

First Person - Mike Moore was a force of nature in New Zealand politics for many years.

Former World Trade Organisation chief Mike Moore speaks at a press conference 14 February 2000 in Singapore.

Former World Trade Organisation chief Mike Moore speaks at a press conference 14 February 2000 in Singapore. Photo: AFP / Roslan Rahman

He was first elected to Parliament in 1972 at an extraordinarily young age and was a back bencher in the third Labour Government.

Although defeated in 1975, he came back as an MP for Papanui in 1978.

When I joined the bevy of Christchurch Labour MPs in 1979, including Ann Hercus, David Caygill and Mick Connelly, Labour was starting to develop political momentum during the Muldoon ascendancy.

I was always grateful that Mike helped me get elected to the Policy Council of the New Zealand Labour Party, shortly before I got into Parliament.

In 1984, be became the third ranking minister in the fourth Labour Government.

Mike had remarkable, restless energy.

He was interested in every political policy and every political opportunity.

Mike was happy to explore any idea, remember Lamburgers!

He was Labour to the core, tribal Labour.

Mike Moore, Geoffrey Palmer & David Lange being sworn into cabinet, 1984

Mike Moore, Geoffrey Palmer & David Lange being sworn into cabinet, 1984 Photo: Supplied

He knew the trade union movement well and the aspirations of working people.

He had deep political convictions and highly developed political instincts.

I shall never forget his energetic introduction of Lotto early in the life of the fourth Labour Government.

His major contributions seemed to me to be in the areas of trade policy as Minister for Overseas Trade and later as Foreign Minister.

He became prime minister briefly before the 1990 election and then became the leader of the Opposition.

His personality was well suited to negotiating and he was involved in many trade negotiations of immense importance to New Zealand.

This experience gave him a good background for becoming Director-General of the World Trade Organisation. And later, as the New Zealand Ambassador to Washington.

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Photo: RNZ / DOM THOMAS

I served with Mike on the 1984 Labour Campaign Committee and one of my abiding memories of him is his pungent political one-liners.

One aspect of politics in Opposition was to "pick the scabs off policy wounds so they bleed."

"In politics the absent are always guilty," he often repeated.

He warned in policy terms of the "danger of riding a bicycle with no hands."

He always said every MP had a segment of the public who related to that MP.

Mike did a lot for New Zealand.

As the fourth Labour government fades into distant memory, Mike's death means that seven MPs who formed part of the Cabinet in 1984 are no longer with us.

It is appropriate to remember with respect one of its senior members, who was also one of New Zealand's most colourful politicians.

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