Former New Zealand Prime Minister Mike Moore passed away early this morning aged 71.
Mr Moore was at his home in Auckland when he died, his wife Yvonne Moore said.
Mr Moore, who was the country’s 34th Prime Minister, suffered a stroke in 2015 when he was New Zealand’s ambassador in
Washington DC and had been in declining health in recent years.
Mrs Moore said her husband had numerous health issues since his stroke.
“Mike was born in Whakatane but grew up in Kawakawa and Moerewa in the Far North and wanted to spend his final months in
the place that gave him his drive, spirit and courage,” she said.
“Mike wanted to be in Northland one last time so he spent much of summer in Matauri Bay and only came back to Auckland
in recent weeks because of his health.
“Northland made him the battler and fighter for ordinary Kiwis he was throughout his life and career and that was what
drove him to become a member of the New Zealand Labour Party at 16-years-old. He was stubborn, optimistic, generous and
kind.
He had an ability to connect with people from all walks of life.
“Having left school at 15 for a job in the freezing works, Mike always believed that his love of reading and hard work
would overcome his lack of formal education.
“Mike was always a good reminder to the Labour Party of its working class roots and will probably be its last blue
collar Prime Minister.
“Mike was a passionate believer in the power of government to advance people through the collective provision of health
and education and how that was the ladder up for ordinary working men and women and their families.”
She said that in keeping with Labour’s traditions he was a committed internationalist.
“As Trade Minister he helped give New Zealand a confident outward view of itself in the world. He also came to believe
in the power of a rules based global trading system and how that, more than international aid, could lift nations out of
poverty. He was a great humanist and a passionate free trader.
Mike Moore loved Parliament, she said.
“He enjoyed being a representative Parliamentarian, doing electorate clinics at the weekends, and during the week
debating issues and legislation in the House. It was in the debating chamber that he felt at home most because he knew
his humour, quick wit and well-read knowledge would set him apart from many others.”
In recent years one of his greatest fears was that he’d die before seeing another Labour Government.
“He was elated when Jacinda Ardern became Prime Minister and thinks she’s extraordinarily gifted and has the potential
to achieve more for New Zealand and on the international stage than any other Labour leader.”
First elected to the Auckland seat of Eden in 1972, Mr Moore was New Zealand’s youngest Member of Parliament at
23-years-old. He held the seat for one term and was defeated in the Rob Muldoon landslide victory in 1975. Soon after,
he had the first of his three bouts of cancer.
In 1978 he was elected to the Christchurch seat of Papanui, defeating National Cabinet Minister Bert Walker. He held
that seat, which later became Christchurch North and Waimakariri, until his retirement from Parliament in 1999.
In the fourth Labour Government from 1984 to 1990, Mike Moore held the portfolios of Overseas Trade & Marketing, Tourism, Sport & Recreation, America’s Cup, External Relations & Trade, Deputy Finance, and Foreign Affairs.
He was the 11th Leader of the New Zealand Labour Party and, therefore, Prime Minister and later Leader of the
Opposition, from 4 September 1990 until 1 December 1993.
Mr Moore was the World Trade Organisation’s third Director General, the highest international role ever held by a New
Zealander, from 1999 to 2002 and oversaw China’s entry into the global rules based trading system. He also launched the
Doha Development Round in 2002.
He was appointed New Zealand Ambassador to the United States in 2010 and played a significant role in the Trans-Pacific
Partnership trade agreement and enhancing the relationship between the two countries.
Mr Moore’s “School Aid” charity, which is run through his old school Dilworth in Auckland and was created in 2009, has
distributed hundreds of thousands of dollars in development aid to schools in Africa.
In 1999 he was awarded the Order of New Zealand, the nation’s highest honour, and in 2012 was awarded the Order of
Australia (honorary officer). He also had five honorary doctorates in commerce, economics and law.
ENDS