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John A. Lee

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
New Zealand politician (1891–1982)
For other people named John Lee, seeJohn Lee (disambiguation).

John A. Lee
Member of theNew Zealand Parliament
forGrey Lynn
In office
2 December 1931 – 25 September 1943
Preceded byJohn Fletcher
Succeeded byFred Hackett
Member of theNew Zealand Parliament
forAuckland East
In office
7 December 1922 – 14 November 1928
Preceded byClutha Mackenzie
Succeeded byJames Donald
Personal details
Born(1891-10-31)31 October 1891
Dunedin, New Zealand
Died13 June 1982(1982-06-13) (aged 90)
Auckland, New Zealand
Political partyDemocratic Labour Party (1940–49)
Labour Party (1919–40)
SpouseMollie Lee
AwardsDistinguished Conduct Medal
Military service
AllegianceNew Zealand Army
Years of service1916-18
Rank Private
Battles/warsWorld War I

John Alfred Alexander LeeDCM (31 October 1891 – 13 June 1982) was a New Zealand politician and writer. He is one of the more prominent avowedsocialists in New Zealand's political history.

Lee was elected as a member of parliament in 1922. After theLabour Party's victory in 1935, Lee was passed over for appointment tocabinet, instead becoming anunder-secretary. He became a critic of the leadership of his party and was expelled in 1940, subsequently founding his own left-wing party, theDemocratic Labour Party. He lost his parliamentary seat at the 1943 election.

Biography

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Early life

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Lee was born inDunedin in 1891, the son of Alfred Lee and Mary Isabella Taylor. His parents were not married, and at the time of his birth, they had already separated due to his father's gambling and alcoholism. Lee's mother had little income, and the family experienced considerable financial hardship. Lee did not do well at school, and he was oftentruant. In 1905, he left school to work, and became involved in petty crime. In 1908, he was convicted of theft, and served time at aboarding school forjuvenile delinquents. He attempted to escape several times and was eventually successful. HistorianErik Olssen has documented that after wandering the country for a time, Lee found work inRaetihi, but was then jailed for liquor smuggling and breaking and entering.[1]: 1–10 

Three years after being released, Lee enlisted in theNew Zealand Expeditionary Force, and served inWorld War I. He was awarded theDistinguished Conduct Medal for action atMessines in June 1917, but was repatriated after being wounded in March 1918 and losing his left arm. He arrived back in New Zealand in July 1919, and established a small business. Lee wrote a novelCitizen into Soldier in 1937 inspired by his wartime experiences.[2]

Early political career

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New Zealand Parliament
YearsTermElectorateParty
1922–192521stAuckland EastLabour
1925–192822ndAuckland EastLabour
1931–193524thGrey LynnLabour
1935–193825thGrey LynnLabour
1938–194026thGrey LynnLabour
1940–1943Changed allegiance to:Democratic Labour

Not long after returning home, Lee became active in theLabour Party. Lee had been a committedsocialist for some time, having read a large amount of Marxist literature over the years. He is said to have heard the speeches ofBob Semple andHarry Scott Bennett through the bars of his jail cell, and in the army, he had been known as "Bolshie Lee" for his views. Lee's status as a veteran was considered valuable by the Labour Party, as the party's anti-conscription stance had caused many to brand it unpatriotic — Lee, a decorated and wounded soldier, was able to counter this perception quite effectively.[citation needed] By 1920, Lee was on the Labour Party's national executive.

In1921, Lee contested the by-election in theAuckland East electorate caused by the resignation ofArthur Myers, but he was defeated byClutha Mackenzie. Historian Olssen claimed that Lee "emerged with enhanced mana" from the campaign after strong speeches on key aspects of Labour's policies in the areas of education, the establishment of a state shipping service, management of speculation around land purchases and the establishment of public works. He was said to have focused on reaching both skilled and unskilled workers and their wives, campaigning for a free nationalised medical service, stronger national systems to support unemployed and provide sickness insurance, extension of entitlement to pensions and endorsement of "equality between the sexes". Lee's arguments were all seen by Olssen as supporting the main position of the Labour Party: "that the cake should be divided more equitably and democracy perfected".[1]: 22  In the1922 general election, however, he stood again and was elected, continuing to speak on equity issues in education, in support of Labour's policy that equality of opportunity was key for the health and education of the young to build economic growth.[1]: p.27  It has been said that in his speeches on defence, Lee went beyond the party's pacifist position, but he did gain some influence by being elected to a sub-committee to establish a defence policy.[1]: p.28  He soon became one of the better known Members of Parliament, noted for his powerful oratory and strong views. He also played a considerable role in the Labour Party's internal policy formulation, where he had a strong interest in foreign affairs, defence and economics.

Lee was re-elected in the1925 election forAuckland East with a majority of 750, but (he later claimed) because of boundary changes, he was narrowly defeated (by 37 votes) in the1928 election. In 1927 the Representation Commission had proposed altering the boundaries of theParnell electorate; which if confirmed would have made the electorate "dry" or no-licence, and without an authority which could issue temporary licences for the Ellerslie and Alexandra Park raceways. Following objections, the boundary between the Parnell and Auckland East electorates was adjusted to include a hotel in the Parnell electorate (so retaining its licensing committee).[3]

So after the 1928 election, Lee took a job managing the Palace Hotel inRotorua (though he did not drink) forErnest Davis.

In the1931 election, Lee won the electorate ofGrey Lynn, having controversially defeated another former MP,Fred Bartram, for the Labour nomination.[4][5] The major political issue of the day was theGreat Depression, and Lee played a significant role in the formulation of Labour's economic policies. Lee also wrote his first novel,Children of the Poor — the book was largely autobiographical, and was a considerable success. The book argued that poverty generated crime and vice, and that only a socialist programme could solve society's problems. He produced a sequelThe Hunted in 1936.[2] In the early 1930s Lee served on theAuckland Rugby League's board and later served as chairman.[6] In 1935, he was awarded theKing George V Silver Jubilee Medal.[7]

Lee caused ructions in the Auckland Labour Party ahead of the1935 mayoral election. He incited a selection controversy after the Labour Party selected local businessmanJoe Sayegh over prominent lawyer and MPRex Mason at the behest of Auckland Labour Representation Committee executiveFred Young. Sayegh was regarded as a competent city councillor and respectable individual, but he was given little chance of defeatingCitizens Committee candidate Ernest Davis (Lee's former employer). As Young had also been employed by Davis for many years, Lee and several other Labour MPs asserted that Young had been bribed by Davis to make certain the selection of a weak Labour mayoral candidate for the mayoralty.[8]: pp.160-162 Lee agitated against Sayegh's campaign and tried to discredit him, labeling him as a "dumb wop fellow who could not even speak English".[8]: p.161  Despite Lee's interference, Sayegh polled better than anticipated in the election, losing to Davis by only 363 votes and topping the poll in the council vote where Labour secured a majority.[9]

Rebel

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Main article:The Lee Affair

When Labour won the1935 election with a large majority, and formed its first government, many expected Lee to enterCabinet. However, Lee did not have the support ofMichael Joseph Savage, the newprime minister. Savage appears to have considered Lee too radical and uncontrolled, while Lee considered Savage too cautious. The two had clashed on a number of policy issues, and in the end, Lee was not awarded ministerial rank — instead, he became anunder-secretary. This position did not, however, have any legal authority until the following year, when Lee threatened to resign. Given responsibility for housing, Lee quickly moved to implement a "socialist" plan forstate housing, with the construction of many new dwellings for the poor.[10]

While Lee was highly enthusiastic about his housing program, he became increasingly unhappy with the new government's economic policies, which he saw as overly cautious. Lee gradually emerged as the leader of Labour's left-wing faction, opposed primarily by the more orthodoxMinister of Finance,Walter Nash. Lee and his allies, as well as being strongly socialist, were influenced bysocial credit theory, and believed that the government should take immediate control of the country's financial system. Nash opposed this, and was able to block proposals put forward by Lee to nationalise theBank of New Zealand. Gradually, Lee's criticism of the Labour Party's leadership became increasingly public.

As well as arguing for a more socialist policy platform, Lee also criticised the Labour Party's internal structure. In particular, he sought to abolish the tradition of having the Prime Minister appoint Cabinet — instead, he wished Cabinet to be elected bycaucus. This was rejected by Savage, and Lee began to portray himself not merely as a campaigner for socialism but as a campaigner for internal party democracy. This stance won Lee considerable support from those who otherwise disliked his views. Lee's attacks came at a time of considerable difficulty for the Labour Party — Michael Joseph Savage was now seriously ill, andWorld War II was breaking out.

Departure from the Labour Party

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Lee was censured by the Labour Party conference of 1939, but continued to attack Labour's leaders for what Lee regarded as Labour's failure to implement socialist policies. On 25 March 1940, Lee was finally expelled from the Labour Party. Lee subsequently published a further attack on Savage and his leadership of the Labour Party entitled "Expelled from the Labour Party for telling the truth: psycho-pathology in politics". Savage died two days later, and was succeeded as prime minister byPeter Fraser, a member of the faction opposed to Lee's left-wingers. Lee quickly announced the establishment of the newDemocratic Labour Party, with himself as leader. He was joined byBill Barnard, theSpeaker and former Mid-Canterbury Labour MPHorace Herring. Others likeJohn Payne, Labour MPRex Mason and Independent MPHarry Atmore were sympathetic to the party.

However, Lee soon alienated many of his supporters (including Barnard) with what was seen as an "autocratic" leadership style, ironic considering his complaints against Savage. In the1943 election, the Democratic Labour Party put forward 52 candidates, includingKeith Hay,Alfred E. Allen andColin Scrimgeour (who stood againstPeter Fraser inWellington Central). The DLP won only 4.3% of the vote, Lee lost his seat to Labour candidateFred Hackett, and none were elected. Barnard stood as an Independent and also lost. The DLP did not stand any candidates in the1946 election, but Lee stood as the sole DLP candidate forGrey Lynn in the1949 election and got 2,627 votes, coming third.

Death and legacy

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Although his parliamentary career was over, Lee continued to write. He remained strongly hostile to the Labour Party, and denounced its leaders as traitors to the working class. In 1963, he published his political memoirs, entitledSimple on a Soap-box. He continued to comment on political matters for some time, although he surprised many with his defence of theUnited States in theVietnam War. He was awarded an honorary LLD by theUniversity of Otago in 1969. Lee died in Auckland in 1982. His wife, Marie (Mollie) Lee, had died in 1976. They had no children, although they raised Lee's three nephews after his sister's death.

In his will, Lee asked that his private papers be deposited withAuckland Libraries a year after his death. Amongst his papers are his scrapbooks, which reflect his highly opinionated personality. Photographs and newspaper clippings have been hastily attached with pinkelastoplast. There are copious annotations in red ballpoint - warm and generous to family and friends but still nursing grudges, decades later, against old foes.[11]

Bill Pearson wrote "People condemned the novels of John A. Lee out of Puritanism but they did not doubt that he was lifting the screen from the indecent truth."[12]

In 1989,Mervyn Thompson adaptedChildren of the Poor into a successful musical play.[13]

In 1975 the corner at the intersection ofGreat North Road and Point Chevalier Road, in the Auckland suburb ofPoint Chevalier, was named after Lee, as was a new block of pensioner flats nearby.[14]

In 2017, Lee's personal document archives held atAuckland Libraries were included in theUNESCOMemory of the World Aotearoa New Zealand Ngā Mahara o te Ao register.[15]

Sporting involvement

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Lee was also involved with sport. In 1924 he was the patron of the Parnell Rugby League Football Club.[16] He was the president of theNewton Rangers Rugby League club in 1933 and was heavily involved withAuckland Rugby League being the president for many years until his retirement from the position at the start of 1942.[17]

Works

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Memorial plaque dedicated to John A. Lee in Dunedin, on the Writers' Walk on the Octagon
Head of John A. Lee sculpted byMolly Macalister, 1967. Heritage Collections Reading Room, Central City Library, Auckland.

Books (first publication)

  • Children of the Poor, 1934.
  • The Hunted, 1936.
  • Civilian into Soldier, 1937.
  • Socialism in New Zealand, 1938.
  • The Yanks are Coming, 1943.
  • Shining with the Shiner, 1944.
  • Simple on a Soapbox, 1963.
  • Shiner Slattery, 1964
  • Rhetoric at the Red Dawn, 1965.
  • The Lee Way to Public Speaking, 1965
  • Delinquent Days, 1967.
  • Mussolini's Millions, 1970
  • Political Notebooks, 1973.
  • For Mine is the Kingdom, 1975
  • Soldier, 1976
  • The Scrim-Lee Papers. 1976 (with CG Scrimgeour & Tony Simson)
  • Roughnecks, Rolling Stones & Rouseabouts, 1977
  • Early Days in New Zealand, 1977
  • The John A. Lee Diaries 1936–1940, 1981
  • The Politician, 1987 (but written in 1936.)

Plus numerous pamphlets mainly published during his political days. Lee also produced a political journal, "John A Lee's Weekly" (which underwent several name changes) from 1940 to 1954.

References

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  1. ^abcdOlssen, Erik (1977).John A. Lee. Dunedin New Zealand: University of Otago Press.ISBN 0908569041.Archived from the original on 24 January 2023. Retrieved25 January 2023 – via National Library of New Zealand.
  2. ^ab"John A. Lee".nzetc.victoria.ac.nz.
  3. ^McRobie, Alan (1989).New Zealand Electoral Atlas. Wellington: GP Books. p. 10.ISBN 0-477-01384-8.
  4. ^"General Election".Auckland Star. Vol. LXII, no. 159. 8 July 1931. p. 5. Retrieved31 October 2014.
  5. ^"Labour's Choice".The New Zealand Herald. Vol. LXVIII, no. 20774. 17 January 1931. p. 12. Retrieved31 October 2014.
  6. ^Coffey, John;Wood, Bernie (2009).Auckland, 100 years of rugby league, 1909–2009. Wellington: Huia. p. 99.ISBN 978-1-86969-366-4.
  7. ^"Official jubilee medals".The Evening Post. 6 May 1935. p. 4. Retrieved3 August 2013.
  8. ^abGustafson, Barry (1986).From the Cradle to the Grave: a biography of Michael Joseph Savage. Auckland: Reed Methuen.ISBN 0-474-00138-5.
  9. ^"Official Counts".The Auckland Star. No. 111. 13 May 1935. p. 8. Retrieved10 February 2018.
  10. ^Olssen, Erik (2014)."Lee, John Alfred Alexander"(First published in The Dictionary of New Zealand 1998; updated June 2014).Te Ara - The Encyclopedia of New Zealand.Archived from the original on 26 September 2022. Retrieved21 December 2022.
  11. ^Sharp, Iain (2007).Real gold : treasures of Auckland City Libraries. Auckland University Press.
  12. ^Bill Pearson (1952)."Fretful Sleepers".Landfall: 6 of 10.
  13. ^"Playmarket listing for Children of the Poor". Archived fromthe original on 18 May 2015.
  14. ^Central Leader, 8 October 1975. p.29
  15. ^"John A Lee Papers".Memory of the World Aotearoa New Zealand Ngā Mahara o te Ao. Retrieved2 December 2024.
  16. ^"League Football/Parnell Club".Auckland Star, Volume LV, Issue 40. 16 February 1924. p. 12. Retrieved14 December 2023.
  17. ^"Newton Rangers Club". Auckland Star, Volume LXIV, Issue 70. 24 March 1933. p. 11. Retrieved16 November 2019.

Further reading

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External links

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New Zealand Parliament
Preceded byMember of Parliament for Auckland East
1922–1928
Succeeded by
Preceded byMember of Parliament for Grey Lynn
1931–1943
Succeeded by
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