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Robert Muldoon

Sir Robert David Muldoon GCMG CH PC (/mʌlˈdn/; 25 September 1921 – 5 August 1992) was a New Zealand conservative politician who served as the 31st prime minister of New Zealand, from 1975 to 1984, while leader of the National Party. Departing significantly from National Party convention, Muldoon was a right-wing populist with a distinctive public persona described as reactionary, aggressive, and abrasive.[1][2][3][4]

This article is about the New Zealand politician. For the Jurassic Park character, see Robert Muldoon (fictional character).

Sir Robert Muldoon

Brian Talboys (1975–1981)
Duncan MacIntyre
(1981–1984)

Jim McLay (1984)

Himself

Bill Rowling

Jack Marshall

Jack Marshall

Jack Marshall

Bill Rowling

David Lange

Robert David Muldoon

(1921-09-25)25 September 1921
Auckland, New Zealand

5 August 1992(1992-08-05) (aged 70)
Auckland, New Zealand

Purewa Cemetery, Meadowbank

(m. 1951)

3

James Henry Muldoon
Amie Rusha Browne

Accountant

New Zealand

1940–1946

After a troubled childhood, Muldoon served as a corporal and sergeant in the army in the Second World War.[5] After a career as an cost accountant, he was elected to the House of Representatives at the 1960 general election as the Member of Parliament (MP) for Tamaki, representing the National Party. Muldoon rose in the Second National Government to serve successively as Minister of Tourism (1967), Minister of Finance (1967–1972), and Deputy Prime Minister (1972). Over this time he built up an informal but solid backing amongst National's mostly rural right faction, which he labelled "Rob's Mob", in imitation of the Mongrel Mob gang. After National lost the 1972 general election to the Labour Party, Muldoon used his connections to oust moderate party leader Jack Marshall and take his place, becoming Leader of the Opposition in 1974. Through Muldoon's ideological blend of moderate social liberalism and protectionist right-wing populism ("counterpunching", a term he coined),[4] and the promise of a lucrative superannuation scheme, National enjoyed a resurgence. The early death of prime minister Norman Kirk severely weakened the Labour Party, and Muldoon soon led National to a decisive victory in the 1975 general election.[4]


Muldoon came to power promising to lead "a Government of the ordinary bloke".[6] He appointed himself Minister of Finance. Although he used populist rhetoric to rail against elites and the political establishment,[7] he consistently tried to centralise power under himself during his premiership.[8] His tenure was plagued by an economic pattern of stagnation, high inflation, growing unemployment, and high external debts and borrowing. Economic policies of the Muldoon Government included national superannuation, wage and price freezes, industrial incentives, and the Think Big industrial projects. He reintroduced and intensified the previous government's policies of the Dawn Raids, which racially targeted Pasifika overstayers. To engage with crime, Muldoon built "unusually close relationships" with criminal gangs; he personally favoured Black Power, and he and his wife Thea met with them on several occasions.[9] In foreign policy, Muldoon adopted an anti-Soviet stance and re-emphasised New Zealand's defence commitments to the United States and Australia under the ANZUS pact. His refusal to stop a Springbok rugby tour of New Zealand divided the country and led to unprecedented civil disorder in 1981. Muldoon became more and more controversial as his premiership progressed; in addition to the controversy of the Springbok tour, he began a smear campaign against Labour MP Colin Moyle for allegedly being gay, visited strip clubs, and once personally punched demonstrators at a protest.[2][10][3]


Muldoon led his party to two additional election victories in 1978 and 1981, with the first-past-the-post electoral system keeping him in power despite losing the popular vote in each election except 1975. At the 1984 snap election, which Muldoon infamously called while visibly drunk, National finally suffered a significant defeat to Labour. Shortly before leaving office, amid a constitutional crisis, Muldoon was forced by the incoming Government to devalue the New Zealand dollar. In 1984, he was only the second prime minister (after Sir Keith Holyoake) to receive a knighthood while still in office. Mounting legal costs encouraged Muldoon to pursue a novelty acting career, but he remained in parliament until his retirement in 1992. He died shortly thereafter; the gang Black Power performed a haka at his funeral.[11]

Muldoon was frequently lampooned in the TVNZ-produced satire show & Gadsby during the 1980s.[21]

McPhail

American President would sometimes mistake the last name of Canadian Prime Minister Brian Mulroney to be Muldoon after changes in government in both New Zealand and Canada in 1984,[133] with many Canadian political cartoonists taking up on this error and referring to Mulroney as 'Muldoon'.[134]

Ronald Reagan

In 1995, actor played Sir Robert Muldoon in the made-for-television mini-series Fallout, depicting the end of the Muldoon National Government.[135]

Ian Mune

A corner on the Remutaka Hill Road section of has been named after the former prime minister.[136][137] Safety work carried out between 2009 and 2012, costing NZ$16.5 million, included realignment to ease the corner.[138][139]

State Highway 2

On 8 January 1977 when he was at Beach for the re-opening of the Piha Surf Life Saving Club club-house after the Project 40 rebuild, he joined the Auckland Rescue Helicopter lifeguards jumping into the surf from the helicopter. He was lifted out of the water and transported back to the beach slung under the helicopter using the rescue strop connected into the cargo hook.[140]

Piha

Electoral history of Robert Muldoon

from the Dictionary of New Zealand Biography

Robert David Muldoon biography

Archived 15 September 2014 at the Wayback Machine

Think Big policy decisions

Archives New Zealand – Robert Muldoon Official Biography