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Peter Fraser

Peter Fraser CH PC (/ˈfrzər/; 28 August 1884 – 12 December 1950) was a New Zealand politician who served as the 24th prime minister of New Zealand from 27 March 1940 until 13 December 1949. Considered a major figure in the history of the New Zealand Labour Party, he was in office longer than any other Labour prime minister, and is to date New Zealand's fourth-longest-serving head of government.

Peter Fraser
Fraser c. 1942
24th Prime Minister of New Zealand
In office
27 March 1940 – 13 December 1949
MonarchGeorge VI
Governor-GeneralGeorge Monckton-Arundell
Cyril Newall
Bernard Freyberg
Preceded byMichael Joseph Savage
Succeeded bySidney Holland
15th Leader of the Opposition
In office
13 December 1949 – 12 December 1950
Prime MinisterSidney Holland
DeputyWalter Nash
Preceded bySidney Holland
Succeeded byWalter Nash
4th Leader of the New Zealand Labour Party
In office
1 April 1940 – 12 December 1950
DeputyWalter Nash
Preceded byMichael Joseph Savage
Succeeded byWalter Nash
Other Ministerial roles
14th Minister of Police
In office
6 December 1935 – 13 December 1949
Prime MinisterMichael Joseph Savage
Himself
Preceded byJohn Cobbe
Succeeded bySidney Holland
11th Minister of Health
In office
6 December 1935 – 30 April 1940
Prime MinisterMichael Joseph Savage
Himself
Preceded byAlexander Young
Succeeded byTim Armstrong
22nd Minister of Education
In office
6 December 1935 – 30 April 1940
Prime MinisterMichael Joseph Savage
Himself
Preceded bySydney Smith
Succeeded byRex Mason
4th President of the Labour Party
In office
12 July 1920 – 15 July 1921
Vice PresidentFrederick Cooke
Preceded byTom Paul
Succeeded byFrederick Cooke
Member of the New Zealand Parliament
for Brooklyn
In office
27 November 1946 – 12 December 1950
Preceded byseat created
Succeeded byArnold Nordmeyer
Member of the New Zealand Parliament
for Wellington Central
In office
3 October 1918 – 27 November 1946
Preceded byRobert Fletcher
Succeeded byCharles Chapman
Personal details
Born(1884-08-28)28 August 1884
Hill of Fearn, Scotland
Died12 December 1950(1950-12-12) (aged 66)
Wellington, New Zealand
Political partyLabour (1916–50)
Social Democratic (1913–16)
Socialist (1910–13)
Spouse
(m. 1919; died 1945)
ProfessionStevedore, politician
Signature

Born and raised in the Scottish Highlands, Fraser left education early in order to support his family. While working in London in 1908, Fraser joined the Independent Labour Party, but unemployment led him to emigrate to New Zealand in 1910. On arrival in Auckland, he gained employment as a wharfie and became involved in union politics upon joining the New Zealand Socialist Party. In 1916, Fraser was involved in the foundation of the unified Labour Party. He spent one year in jail for sedition after speaking out against conscription during the First World War. In 1918, Fraser won a Wellington by-election and entered the House of Representatives.

Fraser became a cabinet minister in 1935, serving under Michael Joseph Savage. He held several portfolios and had a particular interest in education, which he considered vital for social reform. As Minister of Health, he introduced the Social Security Act 1938, which established a universal health care service. Fraser became the Leader of the Labour Party and Prime Minister in 1940, following Savage's death in office.

Fraser is best known for leading the country during the Second World War when he mobilised New Zealand supplies and volunteers to support Britain while boosting the economy and maintaining home front morale. He formed a war cabinet which included several erstwhile political opponents. Labour suffered significant losses in the 1943 election, though the party retained its majority.

Following the war, Fraser was active in the affairs of the 'new' Commonwealth and is credited with increasing New Zealand's international stature. Fraser led his party to its fourth successive election victory in 1946, albeit with a further reduced majority. The after-effects of the war, including ongoing shortages, were affecting his government's popularity. Labour lost the 1949 election and Fraser's government was succeeded by the first National Party government.

Early life Edit

A native of Scotland, Peter Fraser was born in Hill of Fearn, a small village near the town of Tain in the Highland area of Easter Ross. He received a basic education, but had to leave school due to his family's poor financial state. Though apprenticed to a carpenter, he eventually abandoned this trade due to extremely poor eyesight – later in life, faced with difficulty reading official documents, he would insist on spoken reports rather than written ones. Before the deterioration of his vision, however, he read extensively – with socialist activists such as Keir Hardie and Robert Blatchford among his favourites.[1]

Becoming politically active in his early teens, he was 16 years old upon attaining the post of secretary of the local Liberal Association, and, eight years later, in 1908, joined the Independent Labour Party.[2]

Move to New Zealand Edit

In another two years, at the age of 26, after unsuccessfully seeking employment in London, Fraser decided to move to New Zealand, having apparently chosen the country in the belief that it possessed a strong progressive spirit.

He gained employment as a stevedore (or "wharfie") on arrival in Auckland, and became involved in union politics upon joining the New Zealand Socialist Party. Fraser worked as campaign manager for Michael Joseph Savage as the Socialist candidate for Auckland Central electorate. He was also involved in the New Zealand Federation of Labour, which he represented at Waihi during the Waihi miners' strike of 1912. He moved to Wellington, the country's capital, shortly afterwards. Savage went on to be Fraser's predecessor in office as the nation's first Labour Prime Minister.

In 1913, he participated in the founding of the Social Democratic Party and, during the year, within the scope of his union activities, found himself under arrest for breaches of the peace. While the arrest led to no serious repercussions, it did prompt a change of strategy – he moved away from direct action and began to promote a parliamentary route to power.

Upon Britain's entry into the First World War, he strongly opposed New Zealand participation since, sharing the belief of many leftist thinkers, Fraser considered the conflict an "imperialist war", fought for reasons of national interest rather than of principle.[1]

Foundation of the Labour Party Edit

In 1916, Fraser became involved in the foundation of the New Zealand Labour Party, which absorbed much of the moribund Social Democratic Party's membership. The members selected Harry Holland as the Labour Party's leader. Michael Joseph Savage, Fraser's old ally from the New Zealand Socialist Party, also participated.

Later in 1916, the government had Fraser and several other members of the new Labour Party arrested on charges of sedition.[3] This resulted from their outspoken opposition to the war, and particularly their call to abolish conscription. Fraser received a sentence of one year in jail. He always rejected the verdict, claiming he would only have committed subversion had he taken active steps to undermine conscription, rather than merely voicing his disapproval.

After his release from prison, Fraser worked as a journalist for the official Labour Party newspaper. He also resumed his activities within the Labour Party, initially in the role of campaign manager for Harry Holland.

 
Fraser in 1918

Local body politics Edit

In 1919 Fraser stood on the Labour Party's ticket for the Wellington City Council. He and three others were first Labour candidates to win office on the council since before the war. Fraser led a movement on the council to establish a municipal milk distribution department in Wellington, which was to remain in operation until the 1990s.[4] He was re-elected in 1921, though Labour lost ground only winning two seats. In 1923 Fraser stood for Mayor of Wellington. He adopted an "all or nothing" strategy by standing only for the mayoralty, refusing nomination to stand for the council also.[5] Fraser polled higher than any Labour mayoral candidate in New Zealand history but lost by only 273 votes to Robert Wright in the closest result Wellington had ever seen.[6][7]

Fraser made a comeback on the council when he was persuaded to stand in a 1933 by-election. Wright was his main opponent and was victorious in a heavy polling contest which was dubbed by the media as a "grudge match" repeat of 1923.[8][9] Fraser was re-elected to the Council in 1935, topping the poll with more votes than any other candidate.[10] The next year he decided to resign from the council in order to focus on his ministerial duties. A by-election was avoided when Andrew Parlane, also the highest polling unsuccessful candidate from 1935, was the only nominated candidate.[11]

Early parliamentary career Edit

 
Poster featuring candidates for the 1919 general election, including Peter Fraser (centre)
New Zealand Parliament
Years Term Electorate Party
1918–1919 19th Wellington Central Labour
1919–1922 20th Wellington Central Labour
1922–1925 21st Wellington Central Labour
1925–1928 22nd Wellington Central Labour
1928–1931 23rd Wellington Central Labour
1931–1935 24th Wellington Central Labour
1935–1938 25th Wellington Central Labour
1938–1943 26th Wellington Central Labour
1943–1946 27th Wellington Central Labour
1946–1949 28th Brooklyn Labour
1949–1950 29th Brooklyn Labour

In a 1918 by-election, Fraser gained election to Parliament, winning the electorate of Wellington Central.[12] He soon distinguished himself through his work to counter the influenza epidemic of 1918–19, of which Fraser was himself a survivor.

During his early years in parliament, Fraser developed a clearer sense of his political beliefs. Although initially enthusiastic about the Russian October Revolution of 1917 and its Bolshevik leaders, he rejected them soon afterwards, and eventually became one of the strongest advocates of excluding communists from the Labour Party. His commitment to parliamentary politics rather than to direct action became firmer, and he had a moderating influence on many Labour Party policies.

Fraser's views clashed considerably with those of Harry Holland, still serving as leader, but the party gradually shifted its policies away from the more extreme left of the spectrum. Fraser soon became convinced that political action via parliamentary process was the only realistic course of action to achieve Labour movement ambitions. As a result, he accepted the inevitable compromises (which Holland did not) that the attainment of parliamentary success required.[13]

In 1933, however, Holland died, leaving the leadership vacant. Fraser considered contesting it, but eventually endorsed Michael Joseph Savage, Holland's more moderate deputy. Fraser became the new deputy leader.[1] While Savage represented perhaps less moderate views than Fraser, he lacked the extreme ideology of Holland. With Labour now possessing a "softer" image and the existing conservative coalition struggling with the effects of the Great Depression, Savage's party succeeded in winning the 1935 election and forming a government.

Fraser served as vice-president of the Labour Party in 1919–1920, and as party president in 1920–1921.[14]

Cabinet minister Edit

In the new administration, Fraser became the Minister of External Affairs, the Minister of Island Territories, Minister of Health, Minister of Education and Minister of Marine.[15] He showed himself extremely active as a minister, often working seventeen hours a day, seven days a week. During his first years in cabinet, his wife, Janet, had an office next to his and worked as his research assistant and adviser in order that she could spend time with him. She would also prepare meals for him during his long days at parliament.[1]

He had a particular interest in education, which he considered vital for social reform. His appointment of C.E. Beeby to the Education Department provided him with a valuable ally for these reforms. Fraser held a passionate belief that education had a huge part to play in the social reform he desired.[1]

Fraser's narrowly elitist and Anglophile cultural perspectives are illustrated by his crucial role in planning New Zealand's 1940 Centennial celebrations. He used his cultural protege James Shelly, an Englishman who insisted that England was to be the source of New Zealand's cultural life – and by 'cultural' Shelley and Fraser meant so-called high culture sourced from England. As head of the 1940 Centennial Musical Celebrations Shelley followed Fraser in insisting the music would be 'high' culture only. He reassured Fraser that "established Musical Societies, who, throughout New Zealand’s history, have done such magnificent and effective work in developing and keeping alive that appreciation of good music which is so essential to the cultural development of the people of any country." To implement this the Government would import from England "a Musical Adviser and a sufficient number of outstanding Soloists." The result:"a sumtuous feast of good music." Neither Fraser nor Shelley contemplated involving New Zealand born performers and artists.[16]

 
Labour Cabinet, 1935. Fraser is seated on the front row, second right, next to Savage

As Minister of Health, Fraser also became the driving force behind the 1938 Social Security Act. The Act proposed a comprehensive health care system, free at the point of use; it faced strong opposition, particularly from the New Zealand branch of the British Medical Association.[17] Eventually, Fraser negotiated effectively enough to force the Association to yield. Fortunately for him, Janet Fraser had long volunteered in the health and welfare fields and was an invaluable adviser and collaborator.[1]

When the Second World War broke out in 1939, Fraser had already taken over most of the functions of national leadership. Michael Joseph Savage had been ill for some time and was near death, although the authorities concealed this from the public. Fraser had to assume most of the Prime Minister's duties in addition to his own ministerial ones.[1] Internal disputes within the Labour Party made Fraser's position more difficult. John A. Lee, a notable socialist within the Party, vehemently disapproved of the party's perceived drift towards the political centre, and strongly criticised Savage and Fraser. Lee's attacks, however, became strong enough that even many of his supporters denounced them. Fraser and his allies successfully moved to expel Lee from the Party on 25 March 1940.

Prime Minister Edit

When Savage died on 27 March, Fraser successfully contested the leadership against Gervan McMillan and Clyde Carr. He had, however, to give the party's caucus the right to elect people to Cabinet without the Prime Minister's approval – a practice which has continued as a feature of the Labour Party today.

Despite the concession, Fraser remained in command, occasionally alienating colleagues due to a governing style described by some as "authoritarian". Some of his determination to exercise control may have come about due to the war, on which Fraser focused almost exclusively. Nevertheless, certain measures he implemented, such as censorship, wage controls, and conscription, proved unpopular with the party. In particular, conscription provoked strong opposition, especially since Fraser himself had opposed it during the First World War. Fraser replied that fighting in the Second World War, unlike in the First World War, had indeed a worthy cause, making conscription a necessary evil. Despite opposition from within the Labour Party, enough of the general public supported conscription to allow its acceptance.

Second World War Edit

 
Group portrait photograph taken at a gathering of Cabinet ministers in 1941. Fraser is standing in the centre. Former prime minister and dissident National MP Gordon Coates stands furthest right.

Fraser was one of the immediate few in New Zealand who instantly grasped that war meant not merely the involvement of the military, but that of the whole country. These implications were not always recognised either by his own party or by the opposition. Fraser further developed somewhat of an authoritarian streak as a result; this reflected his insistence on the overwhelming importance of the war effort above all else.[1]

During the war, Fraser attempted to build support for an understanding between Labour and its main rival, the National Party. However, opposition within both parties prevented reaching an agreement, and Labour continued to govern alone. Fraser did, however, work closely with Gordon Coates, a former Prime Minister and now a National-Party rebel – Fraser praised Coates for his willingness to set aside his party loyalty, and appears to have believed that National leader Sidney Holland placed the interests of his party before national unity.[18]

In terms of the war effort itself, Fraser had a particular concern with ensuring that New Zealand retained control over its own forces. He believed that the more populous countries, particularly Britain, viewed New Zealand's military as a mere extension of their own, rather than as the armed forces of a sovereign nation. After particularly serious New Zealand losses in the Greek campaign in 1941, Fraser determined to retain a say as to where to deploy New Zealand troops. Fraser insisted to British leaders that Bernard Freyberg, commander of the 2nd New Zealand Expeditionary Force, should report to the New Zealand government just as extensively as to the British authorities.

When Japan entered the war in December 1941, Fraser had to choose between recalling New Zealand's forces to the Pacific (as Australia had done) or keeping them in the Middle East (as British Prime Minister Winston Churchill requested). Opinion was divided on the question and New Zealand's manpower resources were already stretched to capacity. Fraser received assurances from U.S. President Franklin D. Roosevelt that American forces would be made available for New Zealand's defense. The local populace possessed an understandable view that the division's proper place was defending their homes. Fraser weighed up public opinions against the strategic arguments involved and eventually opted to leave New Zealand's Expeditionary Force where it was.[1]

In a remarkable display of political acumen and skill, he then persuaded a divided government and Parliament to give their full support [to leave the army in Africa]. It was leadership of the highest order.[1]

 
Fraser (standing, right) at the 1944 Commonwealth Prime Ministers' Conference in London

Fraser had a very rocky relationship with U.S. Secretary of State Cordell Hull, particularly over the Canberra Pact in January 1944. Hull gave Fraser a sharp and rather demeaning dressing-down when Fraser visited Washington D.C. in mid-1944, which resulted in New Zealand's military becoming sidelined to some extent in the conduct of the Pacific War.

Furlough Mutiny Edit

By early 1943 Fraser faced a major military and strategic problem that also had significant political implications in this New Zealand election year. The New Zealand Division, part of the Eighth Army in North Africa, were now battle-weary. The bulk of the Division had been overseas for almost three years. Nearly 43% of the troops had suffered casualties. "The men were homesick, exhausted and war-weary."[19]

In 1943 Fraser arranged for 6,000 men to return home from the Mediterranean theatre for a three-month furlough (period of military leave), anticipating that the grateful men and their families would be more disposed to vote Labour in the general election.[20] Upon arrival, however, many of the veterans were furious at the numbers in reserved occupations, some of whom were making menial goods of no use to the war effort. Moreover, unions had ensured that bonuses and high pay were awarded to munitions workers, far in excess of the money paid to the men in combat. "No man twice before every man first" became one of the returning soldiers' mantras, and several thousand of them secured an exemption from further service due to age or being married.[21]

A number of the remainder were court-martialed, sentenced to 90 days' imprisonment and forced to return (though some had deserted and were not able to be found. Further, they were denied a military pension and refused government jobs. Due to censorship, the public heard little of the protests and the affair, known as the "Furlough Mutiny", was omitted from post-war history books for many years.[22]

Trans-Tasman relationship Edit

Fraser's government also established a far closer working understanding with the Labor government in Australia. He signed the Australian–New Zealand Agreement of 1944, in which Fraser, under pressure by Australia's foreign minister, H. V. Evatt, overplayed his hand seeking to ensure that both Australian and New Zealand interests in the Pacific would not be overlooked in the war or its aftermath.[1] New Zealand and Australia were both anxious to have their input in the planning of the Pacific War, and later in the decisions of the "Great Powers" in the shaping of the post-war world.[13]

Post-war Edit

After the war ended, Fraser devoted much attention to the formation of the United Nations at the San Francisco conference (UNCIO) in 1945; this "was the apogee of Fraser's career".[23] Noteworthy for his strong opposition to vesting powers of veto in permanent members of the United Nations Security Council, he often spoke unofficially for smaller states. He was elected chairman of one of the main committees which was considering dependent territories, and next year in London was chairman of one of the social-economic committees at the first assembly in London. He earned the respect of many world statesmen through his commitment to principle, his energy, and most of all his skill as a chairman.[24] It was to Fraser's stature that New Zealand would later owe much of its favourable international reputation.[13]

Fraser had a particularly close working relationship with Alister McIntosh, the head of the Prime Minister's department during most of Fraser's premiership and then of the Department of External Affairs, created in 1946. McIntosh privately described his frustration with Fraser's workaholism, and with Fraser's insensitivity towards officials' needs for private lives; but the two men had a genuinely affectionate relationship.

Fraser also took up the role of Minister of Native Affairs (which he renamed Māori Affairs) in 1947. Fraser had had an interest in Māori concerns for some time, and he implemented a number of measures designed to reduce inequality. The Maori Social and Economic Advancement Act, which he introduced in 1945, allowed Māori involvement and control over welfare programmes and other assistance.[25]

New Commonwealth Edit

 
A statue of Fraser in the Government Buildings Historic Reserve in Wellington.

Fraser's Government had proposed to adopt the Statute of Westminster 1931 in its Speech from the Throne in 1944 (two years after Australia adopted the Act), in order to gain greater constitutional independence. During the Address-In-Reply debate, the opposition passionately opposed the proposed adoption, claiming the Government was being disloyal to the United Kingdom. National MP for Tauranga, Frederick Doidge, argued "With us, loyalty is an instinct as deep as religion".[26]

The proposal was buried. Ironically, the National opposition prompted the adoption of the Statute in 1947 when its leader and future Prime Minister Sidney Holland introduced a private members' bill to abolish the Legislative Council, the country's upper house of parliament. Because New Zealand required the consent of the Parliament of the United Kingdom to amend the New Zealand Constitution Act 1852, Fraser decided to adopt the Statute with the Statute of Westminster Adoption Act 1947.[27][28]

The adoption of the Statute of Westminster was soon followed by the debate on the future of the British Commonwealth in its transformation into the Commonwealth of Nations. In April 1949 Ireland, formerly the Irish Free State, declared itself a republic and ceased to be a member of the Commonwealth. In response to this, the New Zealand Parliament passing the Republic of Ireland Act the following year, which treated Ireland as if it were still a member of the Commonwealth.[29] Meanwhile, newly independent India would have to leave the Commonwealth on becoming a republic also, although it was the Indian Prime Minister's view that India should remain a member of the Commonwealth as a republic. Fraser believed that the Commonwealth could as a group address the evils of colonialism and maintain the solidarity of common defence.[30]

To Fraser, the acceptance of India as a republican member would threaten the political unity of the Commonwealth. Fraser knew his domestic audience and was tough on republicanism or defence weakness to deflect criticism from the loyalist and imperialist-minded opposition National Party. Labour had been in office for fourteen years and faced an uphill battle to retain power against National at the general election, which would come just months after the high-profile April 1949 Commonwealth Prime Ministers' Conference. In March 1949 Fraser wrote to the Canadian Prime Minister, Louis St Laurent, stating his frustration and unease over India's position. Saint Laurent had indicated that he would not be able to attend the meeting where the issue of India's republican status would dominate. Fraser argued:

I have the greatest desire to see India retained in the Commonwealth, but for the moment, I see no satisfactory means of bringing this about. Are the members of the Commonwealth who do wish to retain the Crown to end up with a form of words covering an arrangement which is entirely nebulous? Are we justified in releasing India from the obligations which the rest of us willingly assume without any reasonable accommodation on the part of India in return?[30]

Fraser left little doubt New Zealand was opposed to India's membership as a republic when he stated to his colleagues at Downing Street:

New Zealand had been colonized by people of British stock, who had built their new country as an extension of the homeland; and their sentiments of loyalty and affection towards the Royal Family had intensified with the passage of time. Throughout the successive stages by which they had attained full national independence, their loyalty and allegiance had grown progressively stronger. New Zealand would not tolerate any dilution of those loyalties.[30]

The conference quashed a proposal of a two-tier structure that would have had the traditional Commonwealth realms, perhaps with defence pacts, on one tier, and the new members which opted for a republic, on the second tier. The final compromise is perhaps best seen from the title finally accepted for the King, as Head of the Commonwealth.[30]

Fraser argued that the compromise allowed the Commonwealth dynamism, that would in the future allow former colonies of Africa to join as republics and be stalwarts of this New Commonwealth. It also allowed New Zealand the freedom to maintain its individual status of loyalty to the Crown and to pursue collective defence. Indeed, Fraser cabled a senior minister, Walter Nash, after the decision was taken to accept India that "while the Declaration is not as I would have wished, it is on the whole acceptable and maximum possible, and does not at any rate leave our position unimpaired".[30]

Decline and defeat Edit

 
Fraser, c. 1946

Although he relinquished the role of Minister of Education early in his term as Prime Minister, he and Walter Nash continued to have an active role in developing educational policy with C. E. Beeby.

Labour's majority at the 1946 election was reduced to one seat. The after-effects of the war were affecting his government's popularity. Fraser moved to the Wellington seat of Brooklyn, which he held until his death. From 1940 to 1949 Fraser lived in a house "Hill Haven" at 64–66 Harbour View Road, Northland, Wellington, which had been purchased for the use of the then-ill Savage in 1939.[31]

Fraser's domestic policies came under criticism. His slow speed in removing war-time rationing and his support for compulsory military training during peacetime in the 1949 referendum particularly damaged him politically. Some thought this hypocritical compared to Fraser's earlier sentiments on the subject. Much earlier in his career, in 1927 he is noted to have said that compulsory military training was "out of date, inefficient and not worth the money spent on it".[13]

With dwindling support from traditional Labour voters, and a population weary of war-time measures, Fraser's popularity declined. At this stage of his career, Fraser relied heavily on the party "machine". As a result, the gap between the party leadership and rank and file members widened to the point where Labour's political enthusiasm dwindled.[13] In the 1949 election the National Party defeated his government.

Leader of the Opposition Edit

Following the election defeat, Fraser became Leader of the Opposition, but declining health prevented him from playing a significant role. He died at the age of 66, exactly one year after leaving government. His successor as leader of the Labour Party was Walter Nash. His successor in the Brooklyn electorate, elected in the 1951 Brooklyn by-election, was Arnold Nordmeyer.[32]

Personal life Edit

On 1 November 1919, a year after his election to parliament, Fraser married Janet Kemp née Munro, from Glasgow and also a political activist. They remained together until Janet's death in 1945, five years before Fraser's own passing.[33] During Fraser's time as Prime Minister, Janet traveled with him and acted as a "political adviser, researcher, gatekeeper and personal support system".[34] Her ideas influenced his political philosophy.[25] The couple had no children, although Janet had a son from her first marriage to George Kemp.[35]

Death Edit

Fraser died in Wellington on 12 December 1950 from a heart attack following hospitalisation with influenza. His body lay in state in the New Zealand Parliament Buildings for three days and a state funeral service was conducted by the Moderator of the Presbyterian Church.[33] He is buried in the Karori Cemetery.[36]

Honours Edit

In 1935, Fraser was awarded the King George V Silver Jubilee Medal,[37] and in 1937, he was awarded the King George VI Coronation Medal.[38] He was appointed a Privy Counsellor in 1940 and a Member of the Order of the Companions of Honour in 1946.[1]

In 2021, Janet Fraser and Peter Fraser, in recognition of their help for the Polish children were awarded by the President of Poland with Virtus et Fraternitas Medal.[39]

Notes Edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l Beaglehole, Tim. "Fraser, Peter". Dictionary of New Zealand Biography. Ministry for Culture and Heritage. Retrieved 11 December 2011.
  2. ^ Peter Fraser. Encyclopædia Britannica. Retrieved on 24 December 2017.
  3. ^ "Peter Fraser, seditious utterances | NZHistory, New Zealand history online". Ministry for Culture and Heritage. Retrieved 22 December 2017.
  4. ^ Bassett & King 2000, pp. 89.
  5. ^ Bassett & King 2000, pp. 106.
  6. ^ "Wellington City Council". The Evening Post. Vol. CV, no. 107. 7 May 1923. p. 2. Retrieved 16 June 2016.
  7. ^ "The Mayoralty". The Evening Post. Vol. CV, no. 99. 27 April 1923. p. 4. Retrieved 16 June 2016.
  8. ^ "Labour Win". Auckland Star. Vol. LXIV, no. 152. 30 June 1933. p. 12. Retrieved 22 May 2017.
  9. ^ Bassett & King 2000, pp. 128.
  10. ^ "Polling in Wellington". The New Zealand Herald. Vol. LXXII, no. 22105. 10 May 1935. p. 13. Retrieved 2 August 2016.
  11. ^ "No by-election". The Evening Post. Vol. CXXI, no. 109. 9 May 1936. p. 10. Retrieved 29 June 2018.
  12. ^ Scholefield 1950, p. 107.
  13. ^ a b c d e Brown 1966.
  14. ^ Gustafson 1986, p. 156.
  15. ^ New Zealand Parliamentary Debates, Vols. 263–288 (1943–1949).
  16. ^ James Shelley, letter to J.T. Waugh, Private Secretary, Prime Minister’s Office, AADL564 box 87b 1/9/19, ANZ ; Ian Carter, Gadfly: The Life and Times of James Shelley (Auckland: Auckland University Press, 1993); Carter, 'Shelley, James 1884 – 1961'. Dictionary of New Zealand Biography, updated 22 June 2007. < http://www.dnzb.govt.nz.>; Beeby, Biography, pp.46–8
  17. ^ Bryder, Linda; Stewart, J. (2015). "'Some Abstract Socialistic Ideal or Principle': British Reactions to New Zealand's 1938 Social Security Act". Britain and the World. 8: 51–75. doi:10.3366/brw.2015.0167. hdl:2292/25880.
  18. ^ Thorn, James (1952). Peter Fraser: New Zealand's Wartime Prime Minister. Odhams Press.
  19. ^ Jonathan Fennell, "Fighting the people’s war:the British and Commonwealth Armies and the second world war ", (Cambridge, 2019), p.379
  20. ^ Bassett & King 2000, pp. 245.
  21. ^ Bassett & King 2000, pp. 261.
  22. ^ "Hello and goodbye – The Second World War at home | NZHistory, New Zealand history online". nzhistory.govt.nz. 20 December 2012. Retrieved 8 June 2019.
  23. ^ Bassett & King 2000, pp. 296.
  24. ^ Michael Ashby in Clark (1998) p180
  25. ^ a b McLean, Gavin. "Peter Fraser". nzhistory.govt.nz. Ministry for Culture and Heritage. Retrieved 2 January 2018.
  26. ^ Cited in Jim Bolger (16 March 1994). Speech to the Annual Conference of the Newspaper Publishers Association. Newspaper Publishers Association.
  27. ^ History, Constitutional – The Legislative Authority of the New Zealand Parliament – 1966 Encyclopaedia of New Zealand
  28. ^ "New Zealand Parliament – New Zealand sovereignty: 1857, 1907, 1947, or 1987?".
  29. ^ Republic of Ireland Act 1950 (1950 No 13)
  30. ^ a b c d e Harshan Kumarasingham (2006). "The 'New Commonwealth' 1947 – 49: A New Zealand perspective on India joining the Commonwealth". The Round Table. Victoria University of Wellington. 95 (385): 441–454. doi:10.1080/00358530600757276. S2CID 144221115.
  31. ^ Dominion Post (Wellington), 2012: 1 December pE1 & 26 December pA14
  32. ^ Norton, Clifford (1988). New Zealand Parliamentary Election Results 1946–1987: Occasional Publications No 1, Department of Political Science. Wellington: Victoria University of Wellington. p. 203. ISBN 978-0-475-11200-2.
  33. ^ a b "Mr. Peter Fraser Dead; Wartime N.Z. Leader". The West Australian. Vol. 66, no. 20, 095. 13 December 1950. p. 2. Retrieved 10 September 2013.
  34. ^ Ewan, Elizabeth; Innes, Sue; Reynolds, Sian, eds. (2006). The Biographical Dictionary of Scottish Women: From the Earliest Times to 2004. Edinburg: Edinburgh University Press. p. 128. ISBN 978-0748617135.
  35. ^ Stace, Hilary. "Janet Fraser". Dictionary of New Zealand Biography. Ministry for Culture and Heritage. Retrieved 1 December 2011.
  36. ^ "Grave of Peter Fraser, Karori Cemetery". Wellington City Libraries. Retrieved 15 May 2021.
  37. ^ "Official jubilee medals". The Evening Post. 6 May 1935. p. 4. Retrieved 2 July 2013.
  38. ^ Taylor, Alister (1998). The New Zealand Roll of Honour. Alister Taylor. p. 399. ISBN 978-0-908578-58-0.
  39. ^ "Janet, Peter Fraser – Instytut Pileckiego". instytutpileckiego.pl. Retrieved 29 January 2023.

References Edit

External links Edit

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Succeeded by
Party political offices
Preceded by Leader of the Labour Party
1940–1950
Succeeded by
Deputy Leader of the Labour Party
1933–1940
Preceded by President of the Labour Party
1920–1921
Succeeded by

peter, fraser, this, article, about, zealand, politician, other, uses, disambiguation, august, 1884, december, 1950, zealand, politician, served, 24th, prime, minister, zealand, from, march, 1940, until, december, 1949, considered, major, figure, history, zeal. This article is about the New Zealand politician For other uses see Peter Fraser disambiguation Peter Fraser CH PC ˈ f r eɪ z er 28 August 1884 12 December 1950 was a New Zealand politician who served as the 24th prime minister of New Zealand from 27 March 1940 until 13 December 1949 Considered a major figure in the history of the New Zealand Labour Party he was in office longer than any other Labour prime minister and is to date New Zealand s fourth longest serving head of government The Right HonourablePeter FraserCHFraser c 194224th Prime Minister of New ZealandIn office 27 March 1940 13 December 1949MonarchGeorge VIGovernor GeneralGeorge Monckton ArundellCyril NewallBernard FreybergPreceded byMichael Joseph SavageSucceeded bySidney Holland15th Leader of the OppositionIn office 13 December 1949 12 December 1950Prime MinisterSidney HollandDeputyWalter NashPreceded bySidney HollandSucceeded byWalter Nash4th Leader of the New Zealand Labour PartyIn office 1 April 1940 12 December 1950DeputyWalter NashPreceded byMichael Joseph SavageSucceeded byWalter NashOther Ministerial roles14th Minister of PoliceIn office 6 December 1935 13 December 1949Prime MinisterMichael Joseph SavageHimselfPreceded byJohn CobbeSucceeded bySidney Holland11th Minister of HealthIn office 6 December 1935 30 April 1940Prime MinisterMichael Joseph SavageHimselfPreceded byAlexander YoungSucceeded byTim Armstrong22nd Minister of EducationIn office 6 December 1935 30 April 1940Prime MinisterMichael Joseph SavageHimselfPreceded bySydney SmithSucceeded byRex Mason4th President of the Labour PartyIn office 12 July 1920 15 July 1921Vice PresidentFrederick CookePreceded byTom PaulSucceeded byFrederick CookeMember of the New Zealand Parliament for BrooklynIn office 27 November 1946 12 December 1950Preceded byseat createdSucceeded byArnold NordmeyerMember of the New Zealand Parliament for Wellington CentralIn office 3 October 1918 27 November 1946Preceded byRobert FletcherSucceeded byCharles ChapmanPersonal detailsBorn 1884 08 28 28 August 1884Hill of Fearn ScotlandDied12 December 1950 1950 12 12 aged 66 Wellington New ZealandPolitical partyLabour 1916 50 Social Democratic 1913 16 Socialist 1910 13 SpouseJanet Henderson Munro m 1919 died 1945 wbr ProfessionStevedore politicianSignatureBorn and raised in the Scottish Highlands Fraser left education early in order to support his family While working in London in 1908 Fraser joined the Independent Labour Party but unemployment led him to emigrate to New Zealand in 1910 On arrival in Auckland he gained employment as a wharfie and became involved in union politics upon joining the New Zealand Socialist Party In 1916 Fraser was involved in the foundation of the unified Labour Party He spent one year in jail for sedition after speaking out against conscription during the First World War In 1918 Fraser won a Wellington by election and entered the House of Representatives Fraser became a cabinet minister in 1935 serving under Michael Joseph Savage He held several portfolios and had a particular interest in education which he considered vital for social reform As Minister of Health he introduced the Social Security Act 1938 which established a universal health care service Fraser became the Leader of the Labour Party and Prime Minister in 1940 following Savage s death in office Fraser is best known for leading the country during the Second World War when he mobilised New Zealand supplies and volunteers to support Britain while boosting the economy and maintaining home front morale He formed a war cabinet which included several erstwhile political opponents Labour suffered significant losses in the 1943 election though the party retained its majority Following the war Fraser was active in the affairs of the new Commonwealth and is credited with increasing New Zealand s international stature Fraser led his party to its fourth successive election victory in 1946 albeit with a further reduced majority The after effects of the war including ongoing shortages were affecting his government s popularity Labour lost the 1949 election and Fraser s government was succeeded by the first National Party government Contents 1 Early life 2 Move to New Zealand 3 Foundation of the Labour Party 4 Local body politics 5 Early parliamentary career 6 Cabinet minister 7 Prime Minister 7 1 Second World War 7 2 Furlough Mutiny 7 3 Trans Tasman relationship 7 4 Post war 7 5 New Commonwealth 7 6 Decline and defeat 8 Leader of the Opposition 9 Personal life 10 Death 11 Honours 12 Notes 13 References 14 External linksEarly life EditA native of Scotland Peter Fraser was born in Hill of Fearn a small village near the town of Tain in the Highland area of Easter Ross He received a basic education but had to leave school due to his family s poor financial state Though apprenticed to a carpenter he eventually abandoned this trade due to extremely poor eyesight later in life faced with difficulty reading official documents he would insist on spoken reports rather than written ones Before the deterioration of his vision however he read extensively with socialist activists such as Keir Hardie and Robert Blatchford among his favourites 1 Becoming politically active in his early teens he was 16 years old upon attaining the post of secretary of the local Liberal Association and eight years later in 1908 joined the Independent Labour Party 2 Move to New Zealand EditIn another two years at the age of 26 after unsuccessfully seeking employment in London Fraser decided to move to New Zealand having apparently chosen the country in the belief that it possessed a strong progressive spirit He gained employment as a stevedore or wharfie on arrival in Auckland and became involved in union politics upon joining the New Zealand Socialist Party Fraser worked as campaign manager for Michael Joseph Savage as the Socialist candidate for Auckland Central electorate He was also involved in the New Zealand Federation of Labour which he represented at Waihi during the Waihi miners strike of 1912 He moved to Wellington the country s capital shortly afterwards Savage went on to be Fraser s predecessor in office as the nation s first Labour Prime Minister In 1913 he participated in the founding of the Social Democratic Party and during the year within the scope of his union activities found himself under arrest for breaches of the peace While the arrest led to no serious repercussions it did prompt a change of strategy he moved away from direct action and began to promote a parliamentary route to power Upon Britain s entry into the First World War he strongly opposed New Zealand participation since sharing the belief of many leftist thinkers Fraser considered the conflict an imperialist war fought for reasons of national interest rather than of principle 1 Foundation of the Labour Party EditIn 1916 Fraser became involved in the foundation of the New Zealand Labour Party which absorbed much of the moribund Social Democratic Party s membership The members selected Harry Holland as the Labour Party s leader Michael Joseph Savage Fraser s old ally from the New Zealand Socialist Party also participated Later in 1916 the government had Fraser and several other members of the new Labour Party arrested on charges of sedition 3 This resulted from their outspoken opposition to the war and particularly their call to abolish conscription Fraser received a sentence of one year in jail He always rejected the verdict claiming he would only have committed subversion had he taken active steps to undermine conscription rather than merely voicing his disapproval After his release from prison Fraser worked as a journalist for the official Labour Party newspaper He also resumed his activities within the Labour Party initially in the role of campaign manager for Harry Holland nbsp Fraser in 1918Local body politics EditIn 1919 Fraser stood on the Labour Party s ticket for the Wellington City Council He and three others were first Labour candidates to win office on the council since before the war Fraser led a movement on the council to establish a municipal milk distribution department in Wellington which was to remain in operation until the 1990s 4 He was re elected in 1921 though Labour lost ground only winning two seats In 1923 Fraser stood for Mayor of Wellington He adopted an all or nothing strategy by standing only for the mayoralty refusing nomination to stand for the council also 5 Fraser polled higher than any Labour mayoral candidate in New Zealand history but lost by only 273 votes to Robert Wright in the closest result Wellington had ever seen 6 7 Fraser made a comeback on the council when he was persuaded to stand in a 1933 by election Wright was his main opponent and was victorious in a heavy polling contest which was dubbed by the media as a grudge match repeat of 1923 8 9 Fraser was re elected to the Council in 1935 topping the poll with more votes than any other candidate 10 The next year he decided to resign from the council in order to focus on his ministerial duties A by election was avoided when Andrew Parlane also the highest polling unsuccessful candidate from 1935 was the only nominated candidate 11 Early parliamentary career Edit nbsp Poster featuring candidates for the 1919 general election including Peter Fraser centre New Zealand Parliament Years Term Electorate Party1918 1919 19th Wellington Central Labour1919 1922 20th Wellington Central Labour1922 1925 21st Wellington Central Labour1925 1928 22nd Wellington Central Labour1928 1931 23rd Wellington Central Labour1931 1935 24th Wellington Central Labour1935 1938 25th Wellington Central Labour1938 1943 26th Wellington Central Labour1943 1946 27th Wellington Central Labour1946 1949 28th Brooklyn Labour1949 1950 29th Brooklyn LabourIn a 1918 by election Fraser gained election to Parliament winning the electorate of Wellington Central 12 He soon distinguished himself through his work to counter the influenza epidemic of 1918 19 of which Fraser was himself a survivor During his early years in parliament Fraser developed a clearer sense of his political beliefs Although initially enthusiastic about the Russian October Revolution of 1917 and its Bolshevik leaders he rejected them soon afterwards and eventually became one of the strongest advocates of excluding communists from the Labour Party His commitment to parliamentary politics rather than to direct action became firmer and he had a moderating influence on many Labour Party policies Fraser s views clashed considerably with those of Harry Holland still serving as leader but the party gradually shifted its policies away from the more extreme left of the spectrum Fraser soon became convinced that political action via parliamentary process was the only realistic course of action to achieve Labour movement ambitions As a result he accepted the inevitable compromises which Holland did not that the attainment of parliamentary success required 13 In 1933 however Holland died leaving the leadership vacant Fraser considered contesting it but eventually endorsed Michael Joseph Savage Holland s more moderate deputy Fraser became the new deputy leader 1 While Savage represented perhaps less moderate views than Fraser he lacked the extreme ideology of Holland With Labour now possessing a softer image and the existing conservative coalition struggling with the effects of the Great Depression Savage s party succeeded in winning the 1935 election and forming a government Fraser served as vice president of the Labour Party in 1919 1920 and as party president in 1920 1921 14 Cabinet minister EditMain article First Labour Government of New Zealand In the new administration Fraser became the Minister of External Affairs the Minister of Island Territories Minister of Health Minister of Education and Minister of Marine 15 He showed himself extremely active as a minister often working seventeen hours a day seven days a week During his first years in cabinet his wife Janet had an office next to his and worked as his research assistant and adviser in order that she could spend time with him She would also prepare meals for him during his long days at parliament 1 He had a particular interest in education which he considered vital for social reform His appointment of C E Beeby to the Education Department provided him with a valuable ally for these reforms Fraser held a passionate belief that education had a huge part to play in the social reform he desired 1 Fraser s narrowly elitist and Anglophile cultural perspectives are illustrated by his crucial role in planning New Zealand s 1940 Centennial celebrations He used his cultural protege James Shelly an Englishman who insisted that England was to be the source of New Zealand s cultural life and by cultural Shelley and Fraser meant so called high culture sourced from England As head of the 1940 Centennial Musical Celebrations Shelley followed Fraser in insisting the music would be high culture only He reassured Fraser that established Musical Societies who throughout New Zealand s history have done such magnificent and effective work in developing and keeping alive that appreciation of good music which is so essential to the cultural development of the people of any country To implement this the Government would import from England a Musical Adviser and a sufficient number of outstanding Soloists The result a sumtuous feast of good music Neither Fraser nor Shelley contemplated involving New Zealand born performers and artists 16 nbsp Labour Cabinet 1935 Fraser is seated on the front row second right next to SavageAs Minister of Health Fraser also became the driving force behind the 1938 Social Security Act The Act proposed a comprehensive health care system free at the point of use it faced strong opposition particularly from the New Zealand branch of the British Medical Association 17 Eventually Fraser negotiated effectively enough to force the Association to yield Fortunately for him Janet Fraser had long volunteered in the health and welfare fields and was an invaluable adviser and collaborator 1 When the Second World War broke out in 1939 Fraser had already taken over most of the functions of national leadership Michael Joseph Savage had been ill for some time and was near death although the authorities concealed this from the public Fraser had to assume most of the Prime Minister s duties in addition to his own ministerial ones 1 Internal disputes within the Labour Party made Fraser s position more difficult John A Lee a notable socialist within the Party vehemently disapproved of the party s perceived drift towards the political centre and strongly criticised Savage and Fraser Lee s attacks however became strong enough that even many of his supporters denounced them Fraser and his allies successfully moved to expel Lee from the Party on 25 March 1940 Prime Minister EditWhen Savage died on 27 March Fraser successfully contested the leadership against Gervan McMillan and Clyde Carr He had however to give the party s caucus the right to elect people to Cabinet without the Prime Minister s approval a practice which has continued as a feature of the Labour Party today update Despite the concession Fraser remained in command occasionally alienating colleagues due to a governing style described by some as authoritarian Some of his determination to exercise control may have come about due to the war on which Fraser focused almost exclusively Nevertheless certain measures he implemented such as censorship wage controls and conscription proved unpopular with the party In particular conscription provoked strong opposition especially since Fraser himself had opposed it during the First World War Fraser replied that fighting in the Second World War unlike in the First World War had indeed a worthy cause making conscription a necessary evil Despite opposition from within the Labour Party enough of the general public supported conscription to allow its acceptance Second World War Edit nbsp Group portrait photograph taken at a gathering of Cabinet ministers in 1941 Fraser is standing in the centre Former prime minister and dissident National MP Gordon Coates stands furthest right Fraser was one of the immediate few in New Zealand who instantly grasped that war meant not merely the involvement of the military but that of the whole country These implications were not always recognised either by his own party or by the opposition Fraser further developed somewhat of an authoritarian streak as a result this reflected his insistence on the overwhelming importance of the war effort above all else 1 During the war Fraser attempted to build support for an understanding between Labour and its main rival the National Party However opposition within both parties prevented reaching an agreement and Labour continued to govern alone Fraser did however work closely with Gordon Coates a former Prime Minister and now a National Party rebel Fraser praised Coates for his willingness to set aside his party loyalty and appears to have believed that National leader Sidney Holland placed the interests of his party before national unity 18 In terms of the war effort itself Fraser had a particular concern with ensuring that New Zealand retained control over its own forces He believed that the more populous countries particularly Britain viewed New Zealand s military as a mere extension of their own rather than as the armed forces of a sovereign nation After particularly serious New Zealand losses in the Greek campaign in 1941 Fraser determined to retain a say as to where to deploy New Zealand troops Fraser insisted to British leaders that Bernard Freyberg commander of the 2nd New Zealand Expeditionary Force should report to the New Zealand government just as extensively as to the British authorities When Japan entered the war in December 1941 Fraser had to choose between recalling New Zealand s forces to the Pacific as Australia had done or keeping them in the Middle East as British Prime Minister Winston Churchill requested Opinion was divided on the question and New Zealand s manpower resources were already stretched to capacity Fraser received assurances from U S President Franklin D Roosevelt that American forces would be made available for New Zealand s defense The local populace possessed an understandable view that the division s proper place was defending their homes Fraser weighed up public opinions against the strategic arguments involved and eventually opted to leave New Zealand s Expeditionary Force where it was 1 In a remarkable display of political acumen and skill he then persuaded a divided government and Parliament to give their full support to leave the army in Africa It was leadership of the highest order 1 nbsp Fraser standing right at the 1944 Commonwealth Prime Ministers Conference in LondonFraser had a very rocky relationship with U S Secretary of State Cordell Hull particularly over the Canberra Pact in January 1944 Hull gave Fraser a sharp and rather demeaning dressing down when Fraser visited Washington D C in mid 1944 which resulted in New Zealand s military becoming sidelined to some extent in the conduct of the Pacific War Furlough Mutiny Edit By early 1943 Fraser faced a major military and strategic problem that also had significant political implications in this New Zealand election year The New Zealand Division part of the Eighth Army in North Africa were now battle weary The bulk of the Division had been overseas for almost three years Nearly 43 of the troops had suffered casualties The men were homesick exhausted and war weary 19 In 1943 Fraser arranged for 6 000 men to return home from the Mediterranean theatre for a three month furlough period of military leave anticipating that the grateful men and their families would be more disposed to vote Labour in the general election 20 Upon arrival however many of the veterans were furious at the numbers in reserved occupations some of whom were making menial goods of no use to the war effort Moreover unions had ensured that bonuses and high pay were awarded to munitions workers far in excess of the money paid to the men in combat No man twice before every man first became one of the returning soldiers mantras and several thousand of them secured an exemption from further service due to age or being married 21 A number of the remainder were court martialed sentenced to 90 days imprisonment and forced to return though some had deserted and were not able to be found Further they were denied a military pension and refused government jobs Due to censorship the public heard little of the protests and the affair known as the Furlough Mutiny was omitted from post war history books for many years 22 Trans Tasman relationship Edit Fraser s government also established a far closer working understanding with the Labor government in Australia He signed the Australian New Zealand Agreement of 1944 in which Fraser under pressure by Australia s foreign minister H V Evatt overplayed his hand seeking to ensure that both Australian and New Zealand interests in the Pacific would not be overlooked in the war or its aftermath 1 New Zealand and Australia were both anxious to have their input in the planning of the Pacific War and later in the decisions of the Great Powers in the shaping of the post war world 13 Post war Edit After the war ended Fraser devoted much attention to the formation of the United Nations at the San Francisco conference UNCIO in 1945 this was the apogee of Fraser s career 23 Noteworthy for his strong opposition to vesting powers of veto in permanent members of the United Nations Security Council he often spoke unofficially for smaller states He was elected chairman of one of the main committees which was considering dependent territories and next year in London was chairman of one of the social economic committees at the first assembly in London He earned the respect of many world statesmen through his commitment to principle his energy and most of all his skill as a chairman 24 It was to Fraser s stature that New Zealand would later owe much of its favourable international reputation 13 Fraser had a particularly close working relationship with Alister McIntosh the head of the Prime Minister s department during most of Fraser s premiership and then of the Department of External Affairs created in 1946 McIntosh privately described his frustration with Fraser s workaholism and with Fraser s insensitivity towards officials needs for private lives but the two men had a genuinely affectionate relationship Fraser also took up the role of Minister of Native Affairs which he renamed Maori Affairs in 1947 Fraser had had an interest in Maori concerns for some time and he implemented a number of measures designed to reduce inequality The Maori Social and Economic Advancement Act which he introduced in 1945 allowed Maori involvement and control over welfare programmes and other assistance 25 New Commonwealth Edit nbsp A statue of Fraser in the Government Buildings Historic Reserve in Wellington Fraser s Government had proposed to adopt the Statute of Westminster 1931 in its Speech from the Throne in 1944 two years after Australia adopted the Act in order to gain greater constitutional independence During the Address In Reply debate the opposition passionately opposed the proposed adoption claiming the Government was being disloyal to the United Kingdom National MP for Tauranga Frederick Doidge argued With us loyalty is an instinct as deep as religion 26 The proposal was buried Ironically the National opposition prompted the adoption of the Statute in 1947 when its leader and future Prime Minister Sidney Holland introduced a private members bill to abolish the Legislative Council the country s upper house of parliament Because New Zealand required the consent of the Parliament of the United Kingdom to amend the New Zealand Constitution Act 1852 Fraser decided to adopt the Statute with the Statute of Westminster Adoption Act 1947 27 28 The adoption of the Statute of Westminster was soon followed by the debate on the future of the British Commonwealth in its transformation into the Commonwealth of Nations In April 1949 Ireland formerly the Irish Free State declared itself a republic and ceased to be a member of the Commonwealth In response to this the New Zealand Parliament passing the Republic of Ireland Act the following year which treated Ireland as if it were still a member of the Commonwealth 29 Meanwhile newly independent India would have to leave the Commonwealth on becoming a republic also although it was the Indian Prime Minister s view that India should remain a member of the Commonwealth as a republic Fraser believed that the Commonwealth could as a group address the evils of colonialism and maintain the solidarity of common defence 30 To Fraser the acceptance of India as a republican member would threaten the political unity of the Commonwealth Fraser knew his domestic audience and was tough on republicanism or defence weakness to deflect criticism from the loyalist and imperialist minded opposition National Party Labour had been in office for fourteen years and faced an uphill battle to retain power against National at the general election which would come just months after the high profile April 1949 Commonwealth Prime Ministers Conference In March 1949 Fraser wrote to the Canadian Prime Minister Louis St Laurent stating his frustration and unease over India s position Saint Laurent had indicated that he would not be able to attend the meeting where the issue of India s republican status would dominate Fraser argued I have the greatest desire to see India retained in the Commonwealth but for the moment I see no satisfactory means of bringing this about Are the members of the Commonwealth who do wish to retain the Crown to end up with a form of words covering an arrangement which is entirely nebulous Are we justified in releasing India from the obligations which the rest of us willingly assume without any reasonable accommodation on the part of India in return 30 Fraser left little doubt New Zealand was opposed to India s membership as a republic when he stated to his colleagues at Downing Street New Zealand had been colonized by people of British stock who had built their new country as an extension of the homeland and their sentiments of loyalty and affection towards the Royal Family had intensified with the passage of time Throughout the successive stages by which they had attained full national independence their loyalty and allegiance had grown progressively stronger New Zealand would not tolerate any dilution of those loyalties 30 The conference quashed a proposal of a two tier structure that would have had the traditional Commonwealth realms perhaps with defence pacts on one tier and the new members which opted for a republic on the second tier The final compromise is perhaps best seen from the title finally accepted for the King as Head of the Commonwealth 30 Fraser argued that the compromise allowed the Commonwealth dynamism that would in the future allow former colonies of Africa to join as republics and be stalwarts of this New Commonwealth It also allowed New Zealand the freedom to maintain its individual status of loyalty to the Crown and to pursue collective defence Indeed Fraser cabled a senior minister Walter Nash after the decision was taken to accept India that while the Declaration is not as I would have wished it is on the whole acceptable and maximum possible and does not at any rate leave our position unimpaired 30 Decline and defeat Edit nbsp Fraser c 1946Although he relinquished the role of Minister of Education early in his term as Prime Minister he and Walter Nash continued to have an active role in developing educational policy with C E Beeby Labour s majority at the 1946 election was reduced to one seat The after effects of the war were affecting his government s popularity Fraser moved to the Wellington seat of Brooklyn which he held until his death From 1940 to 1949 Fraser lived in a house Hill Haven at 64 66 Harbour View Road Northland Wellington which had been purchased for the use of the then ill Savage in 1939 31 Fraser s domestic policies came under criticism His slow speed in removing war time rationing and his support for compulsory military training during peacetime in the 1949 referendum particularly damaged him politically Some thought this hypocritical compared to Fraser s earlier sentiments on the subject Much earlier in his career in 1927 he is noted to have said that compulsory military training was out of date inefficient and not worth the money spent on it 13 With dwindling support from traditional Labour voters and a population weary of war time measures Fraser s popularity declined At this stage of his career Fraser relied heavily on the party machine As a result the gap between the party leadership and rank and file members widened to the point where Labour s political enthusiasm dwindled 13 In the 1949 election the National Party defeated his government Leader of the Opposition EditFollowing the election defeat Fraser became Leader of the Opposition but declining health prevented him from playing a significant role He died at the age of 66 exactly one year after leaving government His successor as leader of the Labour Party was Walter Nash His successor in the Brooklyn electorate elected in the 1951 Brooklyn by election was Arnold Nordmeyer 32 Personal life EditOn 1 November 1919 a year after his election to parliament Fraser married Janet Kemp nee Munro from Glasgow and also a political activist They remained together until Janet s death in 1945 five years before Fraser s own passing 33 During Fraser s time as Prime Minister Janet traveled with him and acted as a political adviser researcher gatekeeper and personal support system 34 Her ideas influenced his political philosophy 25 The couple had no children although Janet had a son from her first marriage to George Kemp 35 Death EditFraser died in Wellington on 12 December 1950 from a heart attack following hospitalisation with influenza His body lay in state in the New Zealand Parliament Buildings for three days and a state funeral service was conducted by the Moderator of the Presbyterian Church 33 He is buried in the Karori Cemetery 36 Honours EditIn 1935 Fraser was awarded the King George V Silver Jubilee Medal 37 and in 1937 he was awarded the King George VI Coronation Medal 38 He was appointed a Privy Counsellor in 1940 and a Member of the Order of the Companions of Honour in 1946 1 In 2021 Janet Fraser and Peter Fraser in recognition of their help for the Polish children were awarded by the President of Poland with Virtus et Fraternitas Medal 39 Notes Edit a b c d e f g h i j k l Beaglehole Tim Fraser Peter Dictionary of New Zealand Biography Ministry for Culture and Heritage Retrieved 11 December 2011 Peter Fraser Encyclopaedia Britannica Retrieved on 24 December 2017 Peter Fraser seditious utterances NZHistory New Zealand history online Ministry for Culture and Heritage Retrieved 22 December 2017 Bassett amp King 2000 pp 89 Bassett amp King 2000 pp 106 Wellington City Council The Evening Post Vol CV no 107 7 May 1923 p 2 Retrieved 16 June 2016 The Mayoralty The Evening Post Vol CV no 99 27 April 1923 p 4 Retrieved 16 June 2016 Labour Win Auckland Star Vol LXIV no 152 30 June 1933 p 12 Retrieved 22 May 2017 Bassett amp King 2000 pp 128 Polling in Wellington The New Zealand Herald Vol LXXII no 22105 10 May 1935 p 13 Retrieved 2 August 2016 No by election The Evening Post Vol CXXI no 109 9 May 1936 p 10 Retrieved 29 June 2018 Scholefield 1950 p 107 a b c d e Brown 1966 Gustafson 1986 p 156 New Zealand Parliamentary Debates Vols 263 288 1943 1949 James Shelley letter to J T Waugh Private Secretary Prime Minister s Office AADL564 box 87b 1 9 19 ANZ Ian Carter Gadfly The Life and Times of James Shelley Auckland Auckland University Press 1993 Carter Shelley James 1884 1961 Dictionary of New Zealand Biography updated 22 June 2007 lt http www dnzb govt nz gt Beeby Biography pp 46 8 Bryder Linda Stewart J 2015 Some Abstract Socialistic Ideal or Principle British Reactions to New Zealand s 1938 Social Security Act Britain and the World 8 51 75 doi 10 3366 brw 2015 0167 hdl 2292 25880 Thorn James 1952 Peter Fraser New Zealand s Wartime Prime Minister Odhams Press Jonathan Fennell Fighting the people s war the British and Commonwealth Armies and the second world war Cambridge 2019 p 379 Bassett amp King 2000 pp 245 Bassett amp King 2000 pp 261 Hello and goodbye The Second World War at home NZHistory New Zealand history online nzhistory govt nz 20 December 2012 Retrieved 8 June 2019 Bassett amp King 2000 pp 296 Michael Ashby in Clark 1998 p180 a b McLean Gavin Peter Fraser nzhistory govt nz Ministry for Culture and Heritage Retrieved 2 January 2018 Cited in Jim Bolger 16 March 1994 Speech to the Annual Conference of the Newspaper Publishers Association Newspaper Publishers Association History Constitutional The Legislative Authority of the New Zealand Parliament 1966 Encyclopaedia of New Zealand New Zealand Parliament New Zealand sovereignty 1857 1907 1947 or 1987 Republic of Ireland Act 1950 1950 No 13 a b c d e Harshan Kumarasingham 2006 The New Commonwealth 1947 49 A New Zealand perspective on India joining the Commonwealth The Round Table Victoria University of Wellington 95 385 441 454 doi 10 1080 00358530600757276 S2CID 144221115 Dominion Post Wellington 2012 1 December pE1 amp 26 December pA14 Norton Clifford 1988 New Zealand Parliamentary Election Results 1946 1987 Occasional Publications No 1 Department of Political Science Wellington Victoria University of Wellington p 203 ISBN 978 0 475 11200 2 a b Mr Peter Fraser Dead Wartime N Z Leader The West Australian Vol 66 no 20 095 13 December 1950 p 2 Retrieved 10 September 2013 Ewan Elizabeth Innes Sue Reynolds Sian eds 2006 The Biographical Dictionary of Scottish Women From the Earliest Times to 2004 Edinburg Edinburgh University Press p 128 ISBN 978 0748617135 Stace Hilary Janet Fraser Dictionary of New Zealand Biography Ministry for Culture and Heritage Retrieved 1 December 2011 Grave of Peter Fraser Karori Cemetery Wellington City Libraries Retrieved 15 May 2021 Official jubilee medals The Evening Post 6 May 1935 p 4 Retrieved 2 July 2013 Taylor Alister 1998 The New Zealand Roll of Honour Alister Taylor p 399 ISBN 978 0 908578 58 0 Janet Peter Fraser Instytut Pileckiego instytutpileckiego pl Retrieved 29 January 2023 References EditBassett Michael King Michael 2000 Tomorrow Comes the Song A Life of Peter Fraser Auckland Penguin ISBN 978 0 14 029793 5 Thorn James 1952 Peter Fraser New Zealand s Wartime Prime Minister London Odhams Press Brown Bruce 1966 FRASER Right Hon Peter P C C H In McLintock A H ed An Encyclopaedia of New Zealand Ministry for Culture and Heritage Te Manatu Taonga Retrieved 21 April 2016 Clark Margaret editor 1998 Peter Fraser Master Politician Dunmore Press Palmerston North 1997 symposium ISBN 0 86469 323 0 Gustafson Barry 1986 The First 50 Years A History of the New Zealand National Party Auckland Reed Methuen ISBN 978 0 474 00177 2 McGibbon Ian ed 1993 Undiplomatic Dialogue Letters between Carl Berendsen and Alister McIntosh Auckland University Press Auckland Scholefield Guy 1950 First ed published 1913 New Zealand Parliamentary Record 1840 1949 Wellington Govt Printer External links Edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Peter Fraser Prime Minister s Office biography Fraser as Prime Minister by Michael Bassett Newspaper clippings about Peter Fraser in the 20th Century Press Archives of the ZBWGovernment officesPreceded byMichael Joseph Savage Prime Minister of New Zealand1940 1949 Succeeded bySidney HollandPolitical officesPreceded byAlexander Young Minister of Health1935 1940 Succeeded byTim ArmstrongPreceded bySydney Smith Minister of Education1935 1940 Succeeded byRex MasonPreceded byJohn Cobbe Minister of Police1935 1949 Succeeded bySidney HollandPreceded bySidney Holland Leader of the Opposition1949 1950 Succeeded byWalter NashPreceded byApirana Ngata Father of the House1943 1950 Succeeded byBill ParryNew Zealand ParliamentPreceded byRobert Fletcher Member of Parliament for Wellington Central1918 1946 Succeeded byCharles ChapmanNew constituency Member of Parliament for Brooklyn1946 1950 Succeeded byArnold NordmeyerParty political officesPreceded byMichael Joseph Savage Leader of the Labour Party1940 1950 Succeeded byWalter NashDeputy Leader of the Labour Party1933 1940Preceded byTom Paul President of the Labour Party1920 1921 Succeeded byFrederick Cooke Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Peter Fraser amp oldid 1176089094, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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