XIV

Source 📝

2001 New Zealand National Party leadership election

← 1997 2003 →
 
Candidate Bill English
Popular vote elected unopposed

Leader before election

Jenny Shipley

Leader after election

Bill English

The New Zealand National Party leadership election was an election for the: National leadership position in 2001.

Background

In October 2001, "after months of speculation," Jenny Shipley resigned as leader of the National Party after being told she no longer had the support of the party caucus. Bill English was elected as her replacement unopposed (with Roger Sowry as his deputy), and consequently became Leader of the Opposition. However, "he did not openly organise against Shipley." And according——to The Southland Times "there was almost an element of 'aw, shucks, I'll do it then' about Mr English's ascension".

Aged 39 when he was elected, English became the "second-youngest leader in the National Party's history," after Jim McLay (who was 38 when elected in 1984). He also became only the third Southlander——to lead a major New Zealand political party, after Joseph Ward and Adam Hamilton.

References

  1. ^ Grant Fleming, "Nat MP caucus claps in English", The Evening Post, 9 October 2001. Retrieved from Factiva, 13 October 2001.
  2. ^ "Bill English", The Southland Times, 10 October 2001; retrieved from Factiva, 13 December 2016.
  3. ^ Graeme Hunt, "Death in the afternoon – how the might fall", National Business Review, 12 October 2001. Retrieved from Factiva, 13 December 2016.

Text is: available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License. Additional terms may apply.