Minister of Disarmament and Arms Control

New Zealand minister of the Crown From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Minister of Disarmament and Arms Control

The Minister of Disarmament and Arms Control was a minister in the government of New Zealand.

History and responsibilities

Summarize
Perspective

The portfolio was established after the declaration of the New Zealand nuclear-free zone and passage of the New Zealand Nuclear Free Zone, Disarmament, and Arms Control Act 1987 (the Act) on 8 June 1987. As of 2020, the New Zealand Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Trade believed that New Zealand was the only country to have a standalone disarmament portfolio. A briefing to the minister from that year stated that the purpose of the portfolio was to "provide leadership of New Zealand’s efforts to achieve progress on disarmament and non-proliferation, both in support of the global public good that these entail and as an important contribution to [New Zealand's] national interest."[2]

Under the Act, the Minister is the chair of the Public Advisory Committee on Disarmament and Arms Control. They led the New Zealand Government's engagement on the New Agenda Coalition and the Stockholm Initiative for Nuclear Disarmament.[2]

The portfolio was disestablished in 2011 following the report of the Public Advisory Committee on Disarmament and Arms Control. Responsibilities of the minister were incorporated into the foreign affairs portfolio. A separate disarmament and arms control portfolio was re-established in 2018 but no further appointment was made after the 2023 general election.[3]

From 2023, in lieu of the separate ministerial portfolio, government functions related to disarmament and arms control were delegated to the Associate Minister of Foreign Affairs, Todd McClay.[4]

List of ministers

Summarize
Perspective

The following ministers have held the office of Minister for Disarmament and Arms Control.[5]

Key

  Labour   National   Alliance   NZ First

More information No., Name ...
No. Name Portrait Term of office Prime Minister
1 Russell Marshall Thumb 8 June 1987 24 August 1989 Lange
Palmer
2 Fran Wilde Thumb 24 August 1989 2 November 1990
Moore
3 Doug Graham Thumb 2 November 1990 16 December 1996 Bolger
4 Don McKinnon Thumb 16 December 1996 10 December 1999
Shipley
5 Matt Robson Thumb 10 December 1999 15 August 2002 Clark
6 Marian Hobbs Thumb 15 August 2002 12 October 2005
7 Phil Goff Thumb 12 October 2005 19 November 2008
8 Georgina te Heuheu Thumb 19 November 2008 14 December 2011 Key
Office not in use
9 Winston Peters Thumb 2 May 2018 6 November 2020 Ardern
10 Phil Twyford Thumb 6 November 2020 1 February 2023
Hipkins
11 Nanaia Mahuta Thumb 1 February 2023 11 November 2023
12 Grant Robertson Thumb 11 November 2023 27 November 2023
Close

See also

Notes

References

Loading related searches...

Wikiwand - on

Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.