The New Zealand Herald

EDITORIAL: A FINE LEGACY

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If there is a perfect way to leave politics, Bill English has probably done it. He leaves with his party at the top of the polls after nine years in government and the economy it managed still strong. As he was announcing his retirement yesterday, the Treasury revealed a larger than expected Budget surplus for the second half of last year, the economy having generated $600 million more tax for the new Labour-led Government.

But what makes his departure possibly unique is that his final election was not the defeat that eventually has come to all previous prime ministers who stayed the course. His government was denied a fourth term by a small party that put the secondplac­ed party in power for the first time under MMP.

The outcome made retirement more difficult, it risks unsettling the party’s position. The National caucus now has to decide whether its next leader ought to be someone who can maintain the legacy of the previous Government or present a new face to the voters. That is a subject for another day. His remarkable career deserves recognitio­n first.

He came into Parliament at just 28 with the National landslide in 1990. The country was in the most painful phase of economic reform, and recession. Though he had come from the Treasury, English was not a radical reformer. He watched that Government become the most unpopular in recent history as Finance Minister Ruth Richardson cut public spending. National survived the 1993 election by one seat. It was a scare English never forgot.

He joined the Cabinet after that election, rising to Minister of Health and in the Government’s final months its Finance Minister. Shortly after its defeat he became National’s leader. He led it to its worst defeat on record in 2002, a result that, rather unfairly, he could not live down. Against a first-term government doing well enough to deserve reelection, many National supporters gave their vote to small parties that could influence Labour in coalition.

Always ambitious, English sought the leadership again when it became vacant at the end of 2006 but by then National had a new rising star. He and Sir John Key were to form a formidable duo. Successful government is built on a strong finance minister in tandem with a popular prime minister.

When English and Key came to office amid the global financial crisis the country was in recession again but they did not cut spending. The Budget went deep into deficit, and deeper when earthquake­s devastated Christchur­ch.

English gives Key the credit for ruling out retrenchme­nt at that time and Key gives English the credit for bringing the books back to health subsequent­ly. English convinced the Government to treat social welfare as an investment that would ultimately reduce costs if it was directed to people at greatest risk of becoming longer-term state dependents.

He cited social investment as his proudest achievemen­t and hoped it continues under this Government. He departs with respect on both sides of Parliament and a record of economic management that will be hard to match.

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