Chris Finlayson
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The Honourable Chris Finlayson QC MP |
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File:Chris Finlayson-Net Hui 2011.jpg | |
43rd Attorney-General of New Zealand | |
Assumed office 19 November 2008 |
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Prime Minister | John Key |
Preceded by | Michael Cullen |
Minister for National Security and Intelligence | |
Assumed office 13 October 2014 |
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Prime Minister | John Key |
Preceded by | Position established |
Minister for Treaty of Waitangi Negotiations | |
Assumed office 19 November 2008 |
|
Prime Minister | John Key |
Preceded by | Michael Cullen |
Minister of Labour | |
Assumed office 5 November 2012 |
|
Prime Minister | John Key |
Preceded by | Kate Wilkinson |
Minister for Arts, Culture and Heritage | |
In office 19 November 2008 – 13 October 2014 |
|
Prime Minister | John Key |
Preceded by | Helen Clark |
Succeeded by | Maggie Barry |
Member of the New Zealand Parliament for National Party List |
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Assumed office 2005 |
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Personal details | |
Born | 1956 Wellington |
Nationality | New Zealand |
Political party | National Party |
Relations | Annette King (cousin) |
Occupation | Lawyer |
Christopher Francis "Chris" Finlayson QC (born 1956) is a New Zealand lawyer, politician and Member of Parliament, representing the National Party. He is a Cabinet minister and the Attorney-General of New Zealand. He holds the ministerial portfolios of Minister for Treaty of Waitangi Negotiations,[1] and on 6 October 2014, Finlayson also assumed responsibility for the ministerial portfolios of Minister Responsible for the Government Communications Security Bureau and the Minister in Charge of the New Zealand Security Intelligence Service, the country's two main intelligence agencies.[2]
Contents
Early life
Finlayson grew up in the Wellington suburb of Khandallah; he has two brothers.[3] He attended St. Patrick's College. He graduated with a BA in Latin and French and an LLM from Victoria University of Wellington and has practised law in Wellington for a number of years. He has also had a part-time teaching role at Victoria University of Wellington. Finlayson has been heavily involved in the arts community. He chaired Creative New Zealand's Arts Board from 1998 to 2001, and is currently a trustee of the New Zealand Symphony Orchestra.
Legal background
Finlayson was admitted to the Bar as a barrister and solicitor in February 1981. He was a partner in Brandon Brookfield from 1986 to 1990 and then in Bell Gully from 1991 to 2003. He has practised as a barrister sole at the Barristers.Comm chambers since 2003. At Bell Gully he spent years fighting for Ngāi Tahu against the government, pursuing its treaty claims through a series of high-profile court battles. "I used to love going to the office in the morning when we were suing the Crown", Finlayson said in a speech in 2009. "Ngai Tahu mastered the art of aggressive litigation, whether it was suing the Waitangi Tribunal and [National Treaty negotiations minister] Doug Graham or the Director-General of Conservation. It was take no prisoners and it resulted in a good settlement."[4] The signing of the Treaty deal with Ngāi Tahu in 1997, he said in his maiden speech in parliament, was the highlight of his legal career.
Since his admission, Finlayson has appeared in all courts of New Zealand, including seven appearances before the Privy Council, including as counsel for the New Zealand Bar Association in Harley v McDonald [2001] 2 WLR 1749 and counsel for the British Government in Attorney-General for England and Wales v R (a decision of the Privy Council delivered on 17 March 2003). He has extensive experience appearing before tribunals and local authorities in New Zealand. He has had significant experience teaching in the Law faculty of Victoria University of Wellington. Since 1987, he has taught civil procedure for LLB, conflict of laws both for LLB and for LLM, intellectual property for LLB (Hons) and ethics for LLB. He served as Law Society representative on the New Zealand Council of Law Reporting from 1990 until 1998 and the New Zealand Council of Legal Education from 1992 until 1998.[citation needed]
Finlayson co-authored McGechan on Procedure, the leading New Zealand text on the practice and procedure of the Courts of New Zealand, and was the founding editor of the Procedure Reports of New Zealand. He has written papers on many subjects, including intellectual property, litigation and conflicts of interest and has presented New Zealand Law Society seminars on High Court practice, conflicts of interest and limitation.[citation needed]
Since his appointment as Attorney General, Finlayson has been successful in reaching an unprecedented number of financial Waitangi Treaty settlements with many Maori iwi he had represented in private practice. He has also used his executive powers to make more High Court applications seeking litigants be prevented court access on grounds they are vexatious than in the prior 60 years,[5][better source needed] including a protracted court battle against legal news blogger Vince Siemer.
On 13 December 2012, Finlayson recommended himself for appointment as Queen's Counsel by the Governor-General,[6] based on his role as Attorney-General.[7]
Member of Parliament
Parliament of New Zealand | ||||
Years | Term | Electorate | List | Party |
2005–2008 | 48th | List | 27 | National |
2008–2011 | 49th | List | 14 | National |
2011–2014 | 50th | List | 9 | National |
2014–present | 51st | List | 8 | National |
Finlayson joined the National Party in 1974 while still at St Patrick's College, after having had a long conversation with Keith Holyoake at Parliament the previous year.[3] Finlayson stood as National's candidate for the Mana electorate in the 2005 election, and was also ranked twenty-seventh on National's party list, making him the second most highly ranked National candidate who was not already an MP. While he failed to win Mana, losing by a margin of 6,734 votes,[8] the National Party polled well on party votes and Finlayson was elected via the party list. Upon his election, he was appointed shadow Attorney-General by then leader Don Brash. He had previously held the Shadow Cabinet roles of Shadow Attorney-General, Shadow Treaty Negotiations Minister and Shadow Arts, Culture and Heritage Minister. And he was the Deputy Chairman of the Justice and Electoral Select Committee.
Since the 2008 election, Finlayson has contested the Rongotai electorate, which has been held by his cousin Annette King of the Labour Party since the 1996 election.[9] In the 2014 election, the National Party beat the Labour Party in the party vote in that electorate; the first time since the initial Rongotai election in 1996.[10][11]
In June 2010 he was found by the registrar of pecuniary interests to have broken the rules in not declaring a directorship in his annual pecuniary interest return.[12] Following the 2014 New Zealand general elections, Finlayson was appointed as the Minister Responsible for the Government Communications Security Bureau and the Minister in Charge of the New Zealand Security Intelligence Service, the country's two main intelligence agencies. The Prime Minister John Key, who traditionally holds those two ministerial portfolios, has assumed the newly created position of Minister of National Security and Intelligence.[2]
Rank
Initially ranked 27th on the party list, Finlayson was promoted to 18th in the first caucus ranking after the 2005 general election. Following the election of John Key as leader, Finlayson was promoted to the Shadow Cabinet and placed at 14th on the 2008 election party list.
Personal life
Finlayson has described himself as being an "odd fish" since he is gay as well as being a Catholic.[3] He has no partner, and says he is celibate.[3] He is a distant cousin on his mother's side of Labour MP Annette King, with whom he traded insults in 2013.[13]
References
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External links
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Wikimedia Commons has media related to Chris Finlayson. |
- Chris Finlayson MP official site
- Profile at National party
- Profile at New Zealand Parliament
- Releases and speeches at Beehive.govt.nz
Political offices | ||
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Preceded by | Attorney-General 2008–present |
Incumbent |
Minister Responsible for Treaty of Waitangi negotiations 2008–present |
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Preceded by | Minister of Arts, Culture and Heritage 2008–present |
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- ↑ Finlayson Kiwisfirst Man of the Year, 11 January 2013
- ↑ Pursuant to regulation 4 of the Queen’s Counsel Regulations
- ↑ "Appointment of Queen's Counsel" (20 December 2012) 151 New Zealand Gazette 4437 at 4463.
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