The New Zealand Herald

Over the moon

Wacky, wonderful life of new MP

- Audrey Young political editor

Dan Bidois, the child delinquent who was suspended from Howick College for mooning the principal, has achieved another milestone in his story of success by winning the Northcote byelection.

Failure is a big part of the Dan Bidois success story.

In the end it trumped the stronger local credential­s of Labour’s Shanan Halbert by 1362 votes.

“Historical­ly I have also had to lose something in order to win it,” Bidois told the Herald yesterday.

Last election he tried to stand for National in Pakuranga, where he grew up, but was beaten for selection by Simeon Brown. As a consolatio­n, he was placed at No 72 on National’s 75-strong list.

“I applied for a scholarshi­p to Harvard the first time and didn’t get it, a Fulbright,” he said. “It was the second time that I got it.”

The same went for his bid to become student president at Auckland University. “I fought that and lost to a better man. Didn’t win the first time but won it the second time.”

He was arrested as a child for stealing a Mars Bar from a supermarke­t — and ended up many years later as a Foodstuffs executive.

“I was a big failure at school,” he said. He was bottom of the class in schools Star of the Sea Catholic Primary, Howick Intermedia­te and Howick College. “I spent a lot of my time in detention and I got suspended twice from Howick College — for stealing and pulling a moonie at the principal.” He described himself as the “Fonzie” of Howick College — popular for the wrong reasons.

“My parents brought me up and raised me fantastica­lly but for some reason I was just not clicking.”

Overcoming bone cancer at the age of 15 transforme­d his approach to life. He qualified as a butcher then turned to study. He must be one of very few Kiwis who has done courses at MIT in both Manukau (butchery) and Massachuse­tts (behavioura­l economics).

He has four degrees including one from Harvard University (near MIT, Boston).

The astonishin­g range of work for the 35-year-old bachelor includes not only boning carcasses but being employed as an economist at the OECD in Paris for three years.

“Everybody thought I was French because my name was Daniel Michael Bidois, then they discovered no — ‘un peu’.”

Bidois was adopted by Mike and Leah Bidois when he was 9 months old. His parents divorced when he was 9 and his mother later remarried.

He has his birth certificat­e but has not tried to track down his birth parents. “I would love to find them one day but it is just having the time.”

He has two older sisters and an older brother who all live in Auckland but he says he was the only one who went off the rails.

His birth mother was part Maori. Through his adopted father he is Ngati Maniapoto and his marae is Hangatiki marae near Waitomo Caves. “My adoptive family is my family, that’s all I have ever known . . . my family is my family.”

He moved to a rented house in Northcote after his selection as National’s candidate and now plans to buy a house.

“I want to raise a family, I want to get married and have kids, raise a family in what is a fantastic part of Auckland.”

The official byelection results won’t be declared until June 20 but Bidois will head to Wellington to join the National Party caucus tomorrow.

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 ??  ?? Dan Bidois wants to get married and raise a family in “a fantastic part of Auckland”.
Dan Bidois wants to get married and raise a family in “a fantastic part of Auckland”.

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