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The Right Honourable
 David Russell Lange
 ONZ, CH

The Rt. Hon. David Lange in 1984

In office
26 July 1984 – 8 August 1989
(5 years)
Monarch Elizabeth II
Governor–General Sir David Beattie
Sir Paul Reeves
Deputy Geoffrey Palmer
Preceded by Robert Muldoon
Succeeded by Geoffrey Palmer

In office
3 February 1982 – 26 July 1984
Preceded by Bill Rowling
Succeeded by Robert Muldoon

In office
1977–1996
Preceded by Colin Moyle
Succeeded by Taito Phillip Field

Born 4 August 1942(1942-08-04)
Otahuhu, New Zealand
Died 13 August 2005 (aged 63)
Auckland, New Zealand
Political party Labour
Spouse(s) Naomi Joy Crampton (three children);
Margaret Pope (one child)
Religion Methodist

David Russell Lange, ONZ, CH (who pronounced his name /ˈlɒŋi/ LONG-ee) (4 August 1942 – 13 August 2005), served as the 32nd Prime Minister of New Zealand from 1984 to 1989. He headed New Zealand's fourth Labour Government, one of the most reforming administrations in his country's history, but one which did not always conform to traditional expectations of a social-democrat party. He had a reputation for cutting wit and eloquence. His government implemented far-reaching free-market reforms. Helen Clark has described New Zealand's nuclear-free legislation as his legacy.[1]

Contents

Early life

Lange was born in Otahuhu, a south Auckland suburb[2] as the son of a doctor of German stock. His relatives had suffered from prejudice during the First World War due to their German ancestry, and Lange himself would face a political rival in 1984 who tried to discredit him because of his German heritage. He received his formal education at Fairburn Primary School, Otara Intermediate School and Otahuhu College, then at the University of Auckland, where he graduated in law in 1965. He paid his way through university by working in a meat-freezing works. In 1968 he married Naomi Crampton. He gained a Master of Laws in 1970, then practised law in Northland and Auckland for some years, often giving legal representation to the most dispossessed members of Auckland society.

Lange suffered all his life from obesity and the health problems it caused. By 1982 he weighed 165 kilograms, and had surgery to staple his stomach in order to lose weight. He attributed his talent for caustic wit and repartee to the need to defend himself against bullying in his youth.

Political career

Years Term Electorate Party
1977-1978 38th Mangere Labour
1978-1981 39th Mangere Labour
1981-1984 40th Mangere Labour
1984-1987 41st Mangere Labour
1987-1990 42nd Mangere Labour
1990-1993 43rd Mangere Labour
1993-1996 44th Mangere Labour

Lange entered the New Zealand Parliament as the Labour MP for Mangere, a working-class Auckland electorate with a large Māori population, in 1977 in the Mangere by-election. On becoming an MP, Lange quickly made an impression in the House as a debater, a wit, and the scourge of Prime Minister Robert Muldoon. He succeeded Bill Rowling as leader of the Parliamentary Labour Party and as Leader of the Opposition on 3 February 1982.

Prime Minister David Lange posts a letter, at the opening of the new Foxton Post Office, 1980s

Prime minister

When Muldoon called a snap election in 1984, Lange led Labour to a landslide victory, becoming at the age of 41 New Zealand's youngest prime minister of the 20th century.

Upon coming to office, Lange's government uncovered a skyrocketing public debt, ostensibly the result of Muldoon's policy of government regulation of the economy, including a wage- and price-freeze and regulation of the exchange rate. Such economic conditions prompted Lange to remark: "We ended up being run very similarly to a Polish shipyard".[3] Lange and Minister of Finance Roger Douglas engaged in a rapid programme of deregulation and public-asset sales, which brought criticism from many people in Labour's traditional support-base. The Labour Party also lost support from many elderly people by introducing a superannuation surcharge after having promised not to reduce superannuation.

Commentators coined the term Rogernomics for these policies, drawing connections with Reaganomics and with Thatcherism. After the Lange administration's first term (1984-1987), significant divisions started to form in the Labour parliamentary caucus, with Lange becoming uncomfortable with the extent of the reforms, while Douglas and Richard Prebble wanted to push on.

The stock-market crash of 19 October 1987 damaged confidence in the New Zealand economy. In 1988 consensus on economic policy amongst the Labour leadership finally broke down, with Douglas resigning after Lange over-ruled his proposed radical flat income-tax. After losing many members, the Labour Party finally fractured, with Jim Anderton MP forming a breakaway New Labour Party, which later merged into the Alliance Party.

During his tenure as Prime Minister, Lange engaged in competitive motor-sport, appearing in the New Zealand One Make Ford Laser Sport series.

During his term of office as Prime Minister Lange also held the positions of Minister of Foreign Affairs (1984 to 1987) and Minister of Education (1987 to 1989). After Geoffrey Palmer became party leader and Prime Minister in 1989, Lange became (from 1989 to 1990) Attorney-General, Minister in Charge of the Serious Fraud Office and a Minister of State. In failing health, he retired from Parliament in 1996. His Labour Party colleague Taito Phillip Field succeeded him as the Member for the Mangere electorate.

The Queen made Lange a Companion of Honour in 1990 and created him an Ordinary Member of the Order of New Zealand on 2 June 2003.

International affairs

Lange made his name on the international stage with a long-running campaign against nuclear weapons. His government refused to allow nuclear-armed ships into New Zealand waters, a policy that New Zealand continues to this day. The policy, developing in 1985, had the effect of prohibiting United States Navy ships from visiting New Zealand. This displeased the United States and Australia: they regarded the policy as a breach of treaty obligations under ANZUS and as an abrogation of responsibility in the context of the Cold War against the Soviet bloc. After consultations with Australia and after negotiations with New Zealand broke down, the United States announced that it would suspend its treaty obligations to New Zealand until the re-admission of United States Navy ships to New Zealand ports, characterising New Zealand as "a friend, but not an ally". The perceived "crisis" made front-page headlines for weeks in many American newspapers, and media quoted many United States Cabinet members as expressing a deep sense of "betrayal".

Erroneous claims sometimes suggest that David Lange withdrew New Zealand from ANZUS. His government's policy may have prompted the US's decision to suspend its ANZUS Treaty obligations to New Zealand, but that decision rested with the U.S. government, not with the New Zealand government.

Relations with France became strained when French agents of the DGSE bombed and sank the Greenpeace ship the Rainbow Warrior on 10 July 1985 while it lay moored in Auckland Harbour, killing one person. In one of the highlights of this period, a widely-televised Oxford Union debate in 1985 showcased Lange, a skilled orator, arguing for the proposition that "nuclear weapons are morally indefensible", in opposition to U.S. televangelist Jerry Falwell. (TVNZ has made available an audio of Lange's speech.) Many regard this debate as Lange's finest hour on the world stage. It included his memorable statement "I can smell the uranium on it [your breath]...!".[4]

In June 1986 Lange obtained a political deal with France over the Rainbow Warrior affair, presided over by United Nations Secretary-General Javier Pérez de Cuéllar. France agreed to pay compensation of NZ$13 million (US$6.5 million) to New Zealand and also to apologise. In return, Lange agreed that French authorities could detain the convicted French agents Alain Mafart and Dominique Prieur at the French military base on Hao Atoll for three years. However, the two spies both walked free by May 1988, after less than two years had elapsed.

Life after politics

In 1996 Lange sued the Australian Broadcasting Corporation (Lange v Australian Broadcasting Corporation) over an alleged defamation that it broadcast about him. The ABC used the defence that there exists in the Australian Constitution an implied right to freedom of speech on political matters, and the High Court of Australia concurred.

In a key New Zealand defamation case (Lange v Atkinson [2000] 3 NZLR 385), Lange sued political scientist Joe Atkinson for representing him in the magazine North & South as a lazy prime minister. In a 1998 judgment, and on appeal in 2000, the courts affirmed a new qualified privilege for the media to discuss politicians when expressing the criticisms as the "honest opinion" of the author.

Lange received the Right Livelihood Award 2003 for his strong fight against nuclear weapons.

In January 2006 Archives New Zealand released to The Sunday Star-Times newspaper a box of David Lange's previously-classified documents. They revealed New Zealand's ongoing involvement in Western alliance espionage, and a threat by the United States to spy on New Zealand if it did not back down from its ban on nuclear ships.

Personal life

In 1989 Lange separated from his wife of 21 years and admitted to a long-running affair with his speech-writer, Margaret Pope, whom he later married. The matter became extremely public, with both Naomi Lange and Lange's own mother publicly attacking his behaviour. He later became reconciled with both. He had three children, Roy, Emily, Byron (now in their 30s) with his first wife (Naomi) and one daughter, Edith, with his second wife (Margaret Pope).

In the 1990s Lange's health declined, with diabetes and kidney disorders, mostly resulting from obesity. In 2002, doctors diagnosed Lange as having amyloidosis, a rare and incurable blood plasma disorder. He underwent extensive medical treatment for this condition. Although initially told he had only four months to live, Lange defied his doctors' expectations, and remained "optimistic" about his health. He entered hospital in Auckland in mid-July 2005 to undergo nightly peritoneal dialysis in his battle with end-stage kidney-failure. On August 2, he had his lower right leg amputated without a general anaesthetic, as a result of diabetes complications.[5]

His declining health resulted in the bringing-forward of the publication of his memoir My Life to 8 August 2005 (ISBN 0-670-04556-X). TV3 broadcast an earlier pre-recorded interview (with John Campbell) on the same day.

In his last interview, given to the Herald on Sunday from his hospital bed, he made a potent intervention in New Zealand's 2005 election campaign by saying he "wanted to get out of bed and get a wheel-chair to Wellington" to stop any relaxation of his ban on nuclear ships.

Lange died of complications associated with his renal failure and blood disease in Middlemore Hospital in Auckland on 13 August 2005. The David Lange Memorial Trust have erected a memorial to him in Otahuhu.[6]

Trivia

  • Lange's third cousin Michael Bassett became a fellow Cabinet-minister. Lange's father, a doctor, delivered Bassett and Lange insisted his father had dropped Bassett at the time of the birth.[7] Bassett published a book in 2008 about the Lange government, entitled, Working With David (ISBN 1869710940).

Quote

In an interview with The New Zealand Herald (published on 3 July 2004) the Herald asked Lange:

Do you think if the election of 1984 had not been a snap election, there would have been time for the opposing forces within the party to have successfully blocked the reforms or to have severely limited them?

Lange replied:

"You have to talk about why things happened the way they did. You can't actually explain my political life except by a series of situations rather than by some carefully constructed, rigidly progressed ascendancy. You could not imagine two more unlike rides to the top as I had and Helen Clark had: hers the principled, extremely hard-working, fearless really persistence in the face of all sorts of adversities and personal assaults. Whereas mine was some sort of divine roulette. Even entering into Parliament was not one of your created, structured planned-for episodes. I mean one minute I was a clapped-out two guinea legal-aid lawyer and the next minute I was in Parliament. The by-election of 77 saw to that ... I got there in terms of the Labour Party for all the wrong reasons, for all the reasons which weren't part of its tradition. I'd never been a tract writer; I'd never been a philosopher; I'd never taken part in extraordinary industrial dispute activism; I'd not been in any of that background but I was able to mix it in what had become, conceived to be, the new front line of politics — the ability on television to convey confidence and assurance without saying anything. And that is very important ... [I was] plunged into this extraordinary awareness of a crisis in foreign exchange and reserves and having to take steps that were the absolute antithesis of anything that I would ever have expected the week before. If the people of New Zealand thought it was a bit odd, for me it was absolutely staggering ... I had thought of getting the agencies like the IMF, the World Bank to come in and do a de facto receivership. In fact I said so more or less publicly — let us get some external analysis of where we are rather than one which is tainted by my self-interest and by Muldoon's clear self-interest. But it was rendered unnecessary. He put on such an extraordinarily good performance of carrying on and saying I was introducing scorched earth policy. By the time Muldoon had finish[ed] a couple of television appearances, the general public was completely satisfied we were in a mess ..."

References

  1. ^ "Former PM David Lange dies". Newstalk ZB. 14 August 2005. http://www.newstalkzb.co.nz/newsdetail1.asp?storyID=78153. 
  2. ^ Lange, David. My Life. pp. 21–22. 
  3. ^ http://www.nzherald.co.nz/feature/story.cfm?c_id=1500960&objectid=10340844
  4. ^ Lange, David. "Nuclear Weapons are Morally Indefensible". Public Address: Great New Zealand argument. Public Address. http://publicaddress.net/default,1578.sm#post. Retrieved 2008-09-07. "And I'm going to give it to you if you hold your breath just for a moment … I can smell the uranium on it as you lean forward!" 
  5. ^ "I'd rather lose a leg than my life, says Lange" - 4 Aug 2005
  6. ^ "David Lange Memorial". David Lange Memorial Trust. http://www.davidlange.org.nz. 
  7. ^ David Lange, My Life (2005), p.98
  • My Life by David Lange (2005, Viking, Auckland NZ) ISBN 067004556X
  • Working with David: inside the Lange cabinet by Michael Bassett (2008, Hodder Moa Auckland NZ) ISBN 9781869710941
  • Gliding on the Lino: The wit and wisdom of David Lange compiled by David Barber (1987, Benton Ross, Auckland NZ) ISBN 0908636296

External links

 

Preceded by: Robert Muldoon (1984-1989) Succeeded by: Geoffrey Palmer
Sewell | Fox | Stafford | Domett | Whitaker | Weld | Waterhouse | Vogel | Pollen | Atkinson | Grey | Hall | Stout | Ballance | Seddon | Hall-Jones | Ward | Mackenzie | Massey | Bell | Coates | Forbes | Savage | Fraser | Holland | Holyoake | Nash | Marshall | Kirk | Rowling | Muldoon | Lange | Palmer | Moore | Bolger | Shipley | Clark | Key

Quotes

Up to date as of January 14, 2010

From Wikiquote

David Lange (August 4, 1942 — August 13, 2005) served as Prime Minister of New Zealand from 1984 to 1989. He headed New Zealand's fourth Labour Government, one of the most reforming administrations in his country's history, alongside Roger Douglas and Richard Prebble. Lange was renowned for a cutting wit and eloquence. His government implemented far-reaching free market reforms, some of which he later came to oppose and regret. Perhaps his most lasting legacy is New Zealand's Nuclear Free Legislation, which for many symbolised a moral, independent, powerful identity for New Zealand.

425 233 1107

Sourced

  • After a very long year we've got a very short knight.
    • Source: Heinemann Dictionary of New Zealand Quotations (1988), p. 397.
    • On the knighthood of the rather short Sir Robert Muldoon in January 1984. Lange repeated the quote on U.S. television as an explanation of Sir Robert's dislike for him.
  • "I agreed with the prevailing opinion in the Labour Party about nuclear weapons; I went on ban-the-bomb marches in the 1960s and I have not changed my mind about nuclear deterrence since. But I found it hard to accept the Labour Party’s policy that required the exclusion of nuclear-powered ships. Given that nuclear energy exists it is the intention behind its use that matters. The weapons are made to destroy and we have to learn to live without them. The rest may be useful if properly managed. The management is an environmental issue and the inevitable exclusion of nuclear-powered vessels was not an appropriate basis for our foreign policy."
    • Source: David Lange, My Life (2005).
    • Debunking the view of the left wing of the 1980s New Zealand Labour Party that the Lange Government's nuclear weapons ban should also extend to nuclear propulsion.
  • If the American global strategy is dependent on the ability of nuclear ships to come to New Zealand, then God defend the world.
    • Source: Heinemann Dictionary of New Zealand Quotations (1988), p. 397.
    • Referring to American nuclear policy, alluding to New Zealand's national anthem, God Defend New Zealand.
  • We are an enemy of the nuclear threat and we are an enemy of testing nuclear weapons in the South Pacific. New Zealand did not buy into this fight. France put agents into New Zealand. France put spies into New Zealand. France lets off bombs in the Pacific. France puts its President in the Pacific to crow about it.
  • ...a sordid act of international state-backed terrorism.
  • Death is very, very terminal.
    • Source: National Business Review, 1 May 1987, p. 10.
    • In a speech raising awareness about the AIDS epidemic.
  • They couldn't, in the National Party, run a bath and if either the deputy leader or the leader tried to, Sir Robert would run away with the plug.
    • Source: Gliding on the Lino: The Wit of David Lange, compiled by David Barber, 1987.
    • Referring to the National Party's problems with internal discipline and Robert Muldoon's reluctance to relinquish power.
  • The statement which has been made by the Leader of the Opposition was that the intelligence has stopped. I don't know whether that was a personal confession or whether it was a statement of position.
    • Source: Gliding on the Lino: The Wit of David Lange, compiled by David Barber, 1987.
    • Referring to Jim McLay's comments on the effect of the nuclear ships ban on the exchange of military intelligence with New Zealand's allies.
  • An itinerant masseur, massaging the politically erogenous zones.
    • Source: Heinemann Dictionary of New Zealand Quotations (1988), p. 399.
    • Of Jim Bolger, Leader of the Opposition during the 1987 election campaign.
  • After that, whenever I drove past Mangakahia, I would empty my ashtray — and I was a heavy smoker in those days — on the road outside the hall.
    • Source: Dominion, 4 October 1993, p. 10.
    • Lange had been invited during the election campaign to speak with local farmers in the Mangakahia hall. The meeting lasted well over three hours, with many questions and vigorous displays of support. However on election day, of the 88 votes cast in Mangakahia, none were for Lange's labour party.
  • Greens are not expected to be anything but nice.
    • Source: Dominion, 30 December 1991, p. 6.
    • Referring to the New Zealand Ecological Movement.
  • I wouldn't call the Prime Minister gutless. That's all that's left of him.
    • Source: NZPD 456, 1984, p. 107.
    • Referring to Sir Robert "Piggy" Muldoon.
  • He had more on his mind than his mind could hold.
    • Source: A New Zealand Dictionary of Political Quotations, p. 94.
    • Referring to an unsuitable applicant for a high-ranking government position.
  • When asked, "Does God help you?": "He's not really in caucus lately."
    • Source: A New Zealand Dictionary of Political Quotations, p. 94.
  • When asked, "So, what are you going to do with the rest of your life?": "I'm going to be a jockey."
    • Source: A New Zealand Dictionary of Political Quotations, p. 97.
    • Lange was notably rotund.
  • And I'm going to give it to you if you hold your breath just for a moment … I can smell the uranium on it as you lean towards me.
    • Source: http://publicaddress.net/default,1578.sm#post
    • (Commonly misquoted as "I can smell the uranium on your breath", as in A New Zealand Dictionary of Political Quotations, p. 94.)
    • During the Oxford Union Debate, 1 March 1985.
  • Our military forces are an arm of government, just like the Department of Social Welfare, although probably less able to inflict widespread harm.
    • Source: Defence Quarterly, 1993, p.32.
  • On seeing a machine labelled "media steriliser", Lange quipped: "Have that sent to my office immediately."
    • Source: A New Zealand Dictionary of Political Quotations, p. 98.
  • On Roger Douglas: "He's like rust, he never sleeps."
    • Source: A New Zealand Dictionary of Political Quotations, p. 100.
  • He's gone around the country stirring up apathy.
    • Source: A New Zealand Dictionary of Political Quotations, p. 112.
    • Referring to a national tour by Jim Bolger.
  • ...an economic ignoramus unfit to oversee a fifty-cent raffle.
    • Source: New Zealand Wit & Wisdom (1998), p.155.
    • Referring to Muldoon.
  • What a friend we have in cheeses.
    • Source: New Zealand Wit & Wisdom (1998), p.155.
    • Referring to New Zealand's lucrative dairy export industry.
  • Once while waiting at Auckland airport, Lange insisted on buying himself a newspaper and joined a queue at a newsstand. The woman in front of him turned around and said, "Good God!" Lange replied affably, "No madam, you are mistaken. I have never made that claim."
    • Source: A New Zealand Dictionary of Political Quotations, p. 95.
  • My back is so scar-tissued that you couldn't find a place to slip a knife.
    • Source: A Dictionary of New Zealand Political Quotations (2000), p. 96.
  • ...it all happened so quickly you got a lot of bewilderment; you get a lot of people who are basically meat-and-three-veg quarter-acre New Zealanders who find themselves eating dim sims with chopsticks and they can't cope.
    • Source: New Zealand Wit & Wisdom (1998), p.156.
    • Referring to the reforms of the 1980s.
  • Bassett was a member of parliament and a cousin on my father's side of the family. My father delivered him and it became plain in later days that he must have dropped him.
    • Source: David Lange, My Life (2005), p.98
    • Referring to his former Cabinet colleague Dr Michael Bassett, who was delivered by his Doctor father.
  • He viewed humour as a relaxing introduction to many situations. "It is, of course, completely inappropriate in some... but in the end, you know, if you were serious in this job you'd go mad."
    • Source: Gliding on the Lino - The Wit of David Lange, compiled by David Barber, 1987.
  • To US Ambassador H. Monroe Browne, who owned a racehorse called Lacka Reason: "You are the only ambassador in the world to race a horse named after your country's foreign policy."
    • Source: National Business Review, 17/2/86.
  • Winston Peters: "the only member of Parliament named after a concrete block, and I can understand that." [1]
  • "Will the United States pull the rug on New Zealand? The answer is no. They might polish the lino a bit harder and hope that I execute a rather unseemly glide across it."
    • Source: Gliding on the Lino: The Wit of David Lange", compiled by David Barber, 1987.
  • "I've got two shirts still missing from the Bahamas. I'm sure they are part of a youth camping programme somewhere in Tanzania by now."
    • Source: Herald on Sunday, 7/8/05.
  • "I went in a round of the Domain on Saturday morning in a rally car. At the start of it, I was asked if I felt scared. I said, 'certainly not, I have been working with Roger for years'."
    • Source: Gliding on the Lino: The Wit of David Lange, compiled by David Barber, 1987.

Anecdotes

  • Lange was hosting a reception at Vogel House for the Chinese politician Hu Yao Bang when the lights went out. Lange immediately asked all the guests to raise their hands because "many hands make light work." The audience complied, and to their amazement the lights immediately came back on. Lange was invited to visit China.
    • Source: Dominion, 23 March 1992, p. 6.
  • On a trip to Germany, Lange and his entourage were climbing the tower of an ancient castle when they stopped to catch their breath. "How old is this ruin?" someone asked a guide. "Forty-two years," said Lange.
    • Source: A New Zealand Dictionary of Political Quotations, p. 94.

Unsourced

  • Of his political colleagues: "If you took the glasses off some of them they'd be rendered dumb."
  • Of Michael Bassett: "A man who could eat a banana sideways".
  • Sir Robert Muldoon: "At last there is a member with a larger stomach than my own."

David Lange: "Yes, but mine is further from the ground."

  • Asked about the Security Intelligence Service by an opposition MP, he responded: "I can understand the member's desire to have a passing connection with intelligence which seems to have by-passed him all his life. He has kept his secret for years."
  • Commenting on the abilities of former National Party leader Jim McLay: "The performance of the leader of the opposition is now frantically, furiously, skitterishly, hopelessly, nervously, disastrously pathetic."
  • While at a Cabinet retreat in Fiji the menu for the day was explained, "You can get Chinese food all day, however if you want anything else you'll have to make a specific order." Lange quipped, "So it's Wok around the clock?"

Extracts from Press conferences quoted in Gliding on the Lino:

  • To a journalist who asked: "Prime Minister, can we go back to Ruatoria for a moment?": "Certainly, goodbye."
Lange: "Well I think that is a question which I would deem simply so stupid as not to be worth answering,"
Journalist: "Well I can't quite understand..."
Lange: "Well that confirms my assessment of the question."
  • When asked: "Prime Minister, I wonder if we might have a brief word about Australia" by a journalist, Lange replied: "Wombat"
  • Reacting to news that he had retained his Mangere seat in the 1990 election with a provisional majority of 3366: "Well, my majority might be of some interest to students of the Book of Revelation. It's thirty-three sixty-six."
  • Enquiring about his youngest daughter Edith, a journalist asked "Do you worry about being an old dad?" Lange replied: "No, I worry about being a dead dad."
Wikipedia
Wikipedia has an article about:

Simple English


David Lange (August 4 1942—August 13 2005) was the Prime Minister of New Zealand from 1984 to 1989.[1][2]

Contents

Early life

Lange was born in Otahuhu, Auckland. In 1954 he went to a political meeting which made him want to go into politics. After his father was charged with indecent assault, he decided that he would become a lawyer. After finishing school at Otahuhu College, he went to Auckland University to study law in 1960, and graduated in 1966.

Lawyer

In 1967 he was working as a barrister and solicitor in New Zealand, where he took over a legal practice in Kaikohe in 1968. He married Naomi Crampton in 1968. He completed his Master of Laws with Honours in 1970.[1]

Politics

Lange became active in politics when he joined the Labour Party in 1963, while he was still at university. He first tried to get into elected to the Auckland City Council in 1974, but did not get enough votes.[1] In 1975 he tried to get a seat in the New Zealand Parliament, but again was unsuccessful.[1] A third attempt in 1977 was successful and he won the seat of Mangere. He held this seat until he left politics in 1996.[1] His first speech in the parliament was very successful and he was seen as a possible leader of the Labor Party. In 1979 he was made the Deputy Leader, and in 1982 Lange was made the leader. When the Labor Party won the elections in 1984, David Lange became Prime Minister of New Zealand.

Prime Minister

1968 Chosen to go on the Speaker’s tour of India


1984 Found an enormous public debt, resulting in Rogernomics being introduced

1985 Policy passed to not let nuclear armed ships into NZ Waters

1989 Lange and Naomi separate after 21 years of marriage

1989 Resigned as PM

1992 Married Margret Pope

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 1.4 "David Lange dies at 63" (in English). The Age. August 14, 2005. http://www.theage.com.au/news/world/david-lange-dies-at-63/2005/08/14/1123353547517.html. Retrieved 2010-03-10. 
  2. "About David" (in English). David Lange Memorial Trust. http://www.davidlange.org.nz/about-david. Retrieved 2010-03-10. 
  • My Life by David Lange, 2005, Viking, Auckland NZ, ISBN 067004556X
  • David Lange Memorial Trust Website








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