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Attorney-General (New Zealand)

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

Attorney-General of New Zealand
Te Rōia Matua o Aotearoa (Māori)
since 27 November 2023
Crown Law Office
Parliamentary Counsel Office
Serious Fraud Office
StyleThe Honourable
Member of
Reports toPrime Minister of New Zealand
SeatWellington
NominatorPrime Minister
AppointerGovernor-General of New Zealand
on theadvice of the prime minister
Term lengthAt His Majesty's pleasure
Formation7 May 1856
First holderFrederick Whitaker
Salary$288,900[1]
Websitewww.beehive.govt.nz
flagNew Zealand portal

TheAttorney-General (Māori:Rōia Matua)[2] is a political and legal officer in New Zealand. The Attorney-General is simultaneously aministerial position and the chief law officer of the Crown, and has responsibility for supervising New Zealand law and advising the government on legal matters. The Attorney-General serves both a political and apolitical function.[3] The current Attorney-General isJudith Collins.

Responsibilities and powers

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The Attorney-General has two main areas of official responsibility. One, the Attorney-General has ministerial jurisdiction over theCrown Law Office and theParliamentary Counsel Office.[4] They also had responsibility for theSerious Fraud Office from its founding in 1990 until 2008, when it was transferred to theMinister of Police.[5] Two, the Attorney-General is the principal law officer of the Crown, responsible for supervising the state's administration of the law and for providing legal advice to the government.[4] This includes upholding the rule of law[6] and advising on compliance with domestic and international obligations.[7] In the latter role (but strictly not in the former), the Attorney-General is assisted by theSolicitor-General, a non-partisan official.[8] This reduces the extent to which the Attorney-General's actions on behalf of the state (as opposed to the government) can be influenced by their political allegiance.[9]

A more complete description of the Attorney-General's powers can be found inthe briefings to the incoming Attorney-General prepared by the Crown Law Office (most recently in 2024).

At present, there is no statutory basis which establishes the office of Attorney-General, although the position is referenced by a number of other legal documents, such as theConstitution Act 1986 which allows the Solicitor-General to exercise the functions of the Attorney-General.[10] The functions of the Attorney-General are also described in theCabinet Manual.[11]

There is no constitutional duty on the government to follow the advice of the law officers.[12] The Cabinet Manual outlines the process by which the legal advice provided by the Attorney-General (and others) may be disclosed.[13]

The Attorney-General is also responsible for advising theGovernor-General on who should be appointed judges of thecourts of New Zealand.[14]

History

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The post of Attorney-General has existed since the separation of New Zealand as a distinctCrown Colony fromNew South Wales. It is a distinct position from that ofMinister of Justice, although the two posts are sometimes held by the same person, for example,Martyn Finlay held both positions from 1972 to 1975.

Historically, the post could be held either by a politician or by a senior jurist, but today, it is invariably held by a member ofParliament. The Attorney-General is a member of theExecutive Council and is usually appointed as a member of theCabinet. (An exception is whenDavid Lange was appointed Attorney-General outside Cabinet from 1989 to 1990.)

By tradition, persons appointed Attorney-General have been lawyers. Only two attorneys-general have not been lawyers, Prime MinisterGeorge Forbes who held the post from 1933 until 1935 and most recentlyMichael Cullen who held the post in 2005 and again from 2006 to 2008. In November 1906, whenAlbert Pitt died, there was no lawyer in the governingLiberal Party who was free take up the position.[15] HenceJoseph Ward appointedJohn Findlay to theLegislative Council on 23 November 1906[16]: 153  and appointed him Attorney-General andColonial Secretary on the same day.[16]: 74 

The table below is an incomplete listing of New Zealand politicians who have held political appointment as Attorney-General since 1856. It does not show non-political attorneys-general. There were two previous attorneys-general beforeresponsible government was introduced in New Zealand in 1856: Francis Fisher who held office for less than one year in 1841, andWilliam Swainson who held office until 7 May 1856.Peter Wilkinson was the half-brother of his successor,Jim McLay.

List of attorneys-general

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Key

  Independent  Liberal  Reform  United  Labour  National

No.NamePortraitTerm of officePrime Minister
1Frederick Whitaker7 May 185620 May 1856Sewell
2William Fox20 May 18562 June 1856Fox
(1)Frederick Whitaker2 June 185612 July 1861Stafford
(2)William Fox12 July 18612 August 1861Fox
3Henry Sewell2 August 18616 August 1862
4Thomas Gillies6 August 186223 August 1862Domett
(3)Henry Sewell23 August 18621 January 1863
(1)Frederick Whitaker1 January 186324 November 1864
Whitaker
(3)Henry Sewell24 November 186416 October 1865Weld
5James Prendergast16 October 18651 September 1876Stafford
(1)Frederick Whitaker1 September 187613 October 1877Atkinson
6Robert Stout13 October 18778 October 1879Grey
(1)Frederick Whitaker21 April 188225 September 1883Whitaker
7Edward Conolly25 September 188316 August 1884Atkinson
(6)Robert Stout16 August 18848 October 1887Stout
(1)Frederick Whitaker11 October 188724 January 1891Atkinson
8Patrick Buckley24 January 189120 December 1895Ballance
Seddon
9Albert Pitt22 June 190318 November 1906
Hall-Jones
Ward
10John Findlay18 November 190626 December 1911
-Josiah Hanan
acting
28 March 191210 July 1912Mackenzie
11Alexander Herdman10 July 19124 February 1918Massey
12Francis Bell4 February 191818 January 1926
Bell
Coates
13William Downie Stewart Jr18 January 192624 May 1926
14Frank Rolleston24 May 192610 December 1928
15Thomas Sidey10 December 192822 September 1931Ward
Forbes
(13)William Downie Stewart Jr22 September 193128 January 1933
16George Forbes28 January 19336 December 1935
17Rex Mason6 December 193513 December 1949Savage
Fraser
18Clifton Webb13 December 194926 November 1954Holland
19Jack Marshall26 November 195412 December 1957
Holyoake
(17)Rex Mason12 December 195712 December 1960Nash
20Ralph Hanan12 December 196022 December 1969Holyoake
(19)Jack Marshall22 December 19692 February 1971
21Dan Riddiford2 February 19719 February 1972
22Roy Jack9 February 19728 December 1972Marshall
23Martyn Finlay8 December 197212 December 1975Kirk
Rowling
24Peter Wilkinson12 December 197513 December 1978Muldoon
25Jim McLay13 December 197826 July 1984
26Geoffrey Palmer26 July 19844 August 1989Lange
27David Lange4 August 19892 November 1990Palmer
Moore
28Paul East2 November 19905 December 1997Bolger
29Doug Graham5 December 199710 December 1999
Shipley
30Margaret Wilson10 December 199928 February 2005Clark
31Michael Cullen28 February 200519 October 2005
32David Parker19 October 200521 March 2006
(31)Michael Cullen21 March 200619 November 2008
33Chris Finlayson19 November 200826 October 2017Key
English
(32)David Parker26 October 201727 November 2023Ardern
Hipkins
34Judith Collins27 November 2023IncumbentLuxon

References

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  1. ^"Parliamentary Salaries and Allowances Determination 2016"(PDF).www.parliament.nz.
  2. ^"Rōia Matua - te Aka Māori Dictionary".
  3. ^Clayton, CW (1995).Government Lawyers: The Federal Legal Bureaucracy and Presidential Politics. Lawrence: University of Kansas Press. p. 13.
  4. ^ab"Briefing to the Incoming Attorney-General"(PDF). Crown Law. 2023. p. 5–6. Retrieved12 October 2024.
  5. ^"Briefing to the Incoming Minister"(PDF). Serious Fraud Office. 2020. p. 2. Retrieved12 October 2024.
  6. ^Cabinet Office,Cabinet Manual 2017, at [4.3].
  7. ^"CO (16) 2: Cabinet Directions for the Conduct of Crown Legal Business 2016".Department of the Prime Minister and Cabinet. Retrieved2 February 2023.
  8. ^Briefing Paper for the Attorney-General (Crown Law Office, October 2017) at 3.
  9. ^Brookfield (1979). "The Attorney-General".New Zealand Law Journal: 336.
  10. ^Constitution Act 1986, s 9A.
  11. ^Cabinet Office,Cabinet Manual 2017, [4.2]–[4.5].
  12. ^McLachlan, Campbell (2014).Foreign Relations Law. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. pp. [4.35].
  13. ^Cabinet Office,Cabinet Manual 2017, at [4.63–4.72].
  14. ^"Judicial appointments | The District Court of New Zealand".www.districtcourts.govt.nz. Retrieved2 February 2023.
  15. ^Paterson, Donald Edgar (1966)."Findlay, the Hon. Sir John George". InMcLintock, A. H. (ed.).An Encyclopaedia of New Zealand. Retrieved12 October 2024 – via Te Ara – the Encyclopedia of New Zealand.
  16. ^abWilson, James Oakley (1985) [First ed. published 1913].New Zealand Parliamentary Record, 1840–1984 (4th ed.). Wellington: V.R. Ward, Govt. Printer.OCLC 154283103.

External links

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