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James Shaw gives final speech to Parliament, reveals post-politics job

Author
NZ Herald,
Publish Date
Wed, 1 May 2024, 5:37pm

James Shaw gives final speech to Parliament, reveals post-politics job

Author
NZ Herald,
Publish Date
Wed, 1 May 2024, 5:37pm

Former Green Party co-leader James Shaw has given his last speech in Parliament this evening, marking the end of nearly nine years as leader and almost a decade as an MP.

Shaw began his valedictory speech at 5.30pm. It followed his resignation as co-leader in January. He served as a Government minister for six years.

Shaw has also revealed his post-politics gig tonight.

Infrastructure investment firm Morrison tonight announced Shaw is joining the company as an operating partner, based in Wellington.

The company - founded by the late New Zealand businessman Lloyd Morrison - said Shaw will be focused on driving the next generation of investment opportunities to support global de-carbonisation.

Meanwhile, Greenbridge Capital Management says Shaw is also joining part-time as its director of climate opportunity and global development.

Shaw began his valedictory speech by speaking about the 鈥渨hite-knuckle ride that is politics鈥, recounting the exhaustion he felt during past election campaigns, the disappointment of political polls, and the whirlwind of becoming a minister.

鈥淚 am simultaneously saddened and elated to be leaving [politics]. But mostly elated.鈥

He continued by expressing his gratitude. The first mention went to his wife, Annabel Shaw, sharing the story about how they first met in 2011 and how she reacted to learning he was running for Parliament.

鈥淎nnabel chose this life. A husband who is either choking to death from exhaustion and stress or overseas meeting the Pope. She chose to sacrifice the next 10 years to it and she would have chosen another three, if we had won another term in Government.

鈥淭his has never been just my journey, it has always been ours. Annabel, everything I have done here, I owe to you. Thank you. I love you.鈥

He then paid mention to his parents, Cynthia Shaw and Suzanne Jungersen. He spoke of what it meant to him and his parents when the Marriage Equality Act passed in 2013.

鈥淭hank you for being here. Tonight and always.鈥

Shaw mentioned an incident where 鈥渁 particularly vexed gentleman鈥 fractured his eye socket on the street, and thanked two people who came to his aid, and were watching his speech from the public gallery.

His final thanks went to Green Party members, supporters, volunteers, party staffers and his political colleagues.

To his first co-leader, Metiria Turei, Shaw said she had been an inspiration: 鈥淭hank you for putting your faith in me in my early days. That meant everything to me.鈥

To his second co-leader, Marama Davidson, Shaw said they were the only people who knew what it was like to be them: 鈥淭hank you for your partnership, your leadership and for teaching me so much these last six years鈥.

To his colleagues across the aisle, Shaw paid special mention to former National Party leader Todd Muller for 鈥渉is integrity, commitment and candour鈥.

Shaw then acknowledged Dame Jacinda Ardern and Grant Robertson, sharing brief stories about his interactions with both senior Labour figures.

鈥淚t was an honour and a pleasure to work with Grant in Government, including a term as his Associate Finance Minister. In my experience, he is one of the most decent, principled and thoughtful people I have ever met and the most talented politician of my generation.鈥

On Ardern, he said: 鈥淚 remember meeting a promising youth-adjacent Labour candidate in 2008, when we were both living in London and campaigning for the expat vote for our respective parties.

鈥淎t the time, she was president of the International Union of Socialist Youth. I said I didn鈥檛 realise socialists were still allowed into the Labour Party.

鈥淪erving in Jacinda Ardern鈥檚 Government was the privilege of my lifetime. She is a woman of humility, service, intelligence and integrity.

鈥淛acinda and Grant were the best of us.鈥

He looked back on the tumultuous election results the Greens have seen over successive elections, concluding, 鈥渋n my entirely objective and unbiased assessment, the Greens are now in better shape than we have ever been鈥.

鈥楥onsensus is fraying, the framework is being quietly sabotaged鈥

Shaw used his speech to warn of the risk New Zealand would 鈥渃ollapse into the climate culture wars that we see in the USA, the UK, Canada, Australia and elsewhere鈥.

鈥淧ressure is building and the consensus is already fraying,鈥 he said.

鈥淪ome... partisans sit in this House. Some of them are now Government ministers. The framework is being quietly sabotaged, subtly undermined.鈥

He spoke of what legacy he left, but said 鈥渢hat word makes me nervous鈥.

鈥淏ecause the politics and policy of climate change isn鈥檛 about me. It鈥檚 about people who won鈥檛 be born for decades. The only true legacy we can leave is to cherish the world we鈥檝e been given and to bequeath a better one for our descendants.鈥

On Sunday, Shaw reflected on the tougher moments of his time in office.

He admitted he came close to throwing in the towel several times when he met resistance to climate change reform.

He served as the previous Government鈥檚 Climate Change Minister for six years before being appointed Associate Environment Minister in Labour鈥檚 second term, when he oversaw biodiversity.

Former Green Party co-leader James Shaw gives his last speech in Parliament on May 1, 2024. Photo / Mark Mitchell
Former Green Party co-leader James Shaw gives his last speech in Parliament on May 1, 2024. Photo / Mark Mitchell

Shaw had declined to answer questions during previous interviews about whether he had ever threatened to quit while serving as a minister.

He expressed his public frustration with the pace of advancement with his coalition partner while serving as co-leader.

However, as he prepared to give his departing speech this week, he was candid with Jack Tame on TVNZ鈥檚 Q&A.

Shaw said there were times when he was 鈥渞eally close鈥 to calling it quits.

鈥淭here were a few times, the two most significant ones would鈥檝e been when we were debating increasing our Paris [the 2030] target, prior to the Glasgow conference,鈥 Shaw said.

鈥淭he other one was the National Policy Statement on Indigenous Biodiversity, which is currently getting unwound.

鈥淏ut that got really difficult, and I ended up storming out of the Cabinet meeting that decided it. Three minutes later, David Parker materialised in my office to say, 鈥楲ook, we鈥檙e gonna work out a way to get this done鈥.鈥

He said he told minister Megan Woods his resignation letter was written out and he would hand it in if it went through.

鈥淭hat programme, indigenous biodiversity, something in absolute crisis. We鈥檇 gone 30 years without national direction on it - there had been a number of attempts.鈥

Former Greens co-leader James Shaw said he came close to quitting during his career. Photo / Mark Mitchell
Former Greens co-leader James Shaw said he came close to quitting during his career. Photo / Mark Mitchell

Shaw was a major force behind the previous Government鈥檚 climate change policies while serving as minister.

Shaw told Q&A he thought the Zero Carbon Act had passed its 鈥渇irst acid test鈥 by withstanding the change in administration.

Act promised during the election campaign to repeal the law. Shaw did, however, express confidence that the National Party was dedicated to maintaining it.

The former co-leader acknowledged that he was unable to force through all of the legislative measures he wanted, including the pricing of agricultural emissions.

鈥淔irst of all, I think we鈥檝e got the way we organised ourselves, wrong. We needed single-point accountability inside the Government.

鈥淲e should probably have parked the work with the Treasury, rather than with the Ministry for Primary Industries and the Ministry for the Environment, because the kind of tensions between those agencies was a big part of the problem.鈥

This article was originally published on the NZ Herald

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