The New Zealand Herald

Life, love & dancing

12 Questions with David Seymour

- 12question­s@nzherald.co.nz Jennifer Dann

1 relationsh­ip? When were you last in a serious

Earlier this year, but I try to keep the women in my life private. Everybody hopes that they’ll find a soulmate they’ll settle down with. I’ve been on that track and then moved to Canada and back twice for my career, losing a relationsh­ip each time. The last four years in Parliament have been madness. It’s just one of those things. What motivates me ultimately is better public policy. Guys like Richard Prebble and Roger Douglas really did change New Zealand for the better.

2 politics, If you’re so serious about why do Dancing with

the Stars?

I’ve written two books on public policy and no one gave a s*** about them. Then I watched Jacinda Ardern become leader and get a 20 point bump in the polls on exactly the same policies, and I thought “Jesus Christ, obviously all my effort is not paying off”. I’ve been able to connect with more people in three months of DWTS than in four years of banging away about regulatory reform. If you look at the show’s format, I get to spend at least twice as much time talking as I do dancing.

3 undermined Do you worry that it your credibilit­y?

Most people see it for what it is — an entertainm­ent show — and frankly I played the game pretty well.

If people are so snooty that they think me twerking in a Lycra outfit takes away the fact that I’m one of Parliament’s most serious politician­s, then I probably wasn’t getting their vote anyway.

4people’s Do you think DWTS changed minds about you?

I know it did, from the torrents of correspond­ence I received. People said things like, “I used to think you were a complete dick but now I think you’re okay”. I think what people liked was that everybody’s got their shortcomin­gs; mine were pretty obvious in terms of dancing. Hopefully I’m a bit like my mum; she couldn’t walk very well as a result of getting polio as a baby. She was told she’d never drive, work or have children but she overcame all that and did it anyway. I hope that if we achieved anything, we raised a flag for people just being themselves and being accepted for who they are.

5different? Have you always been

Yes, but we all are. I don’t think people have a right to make others conform. Anyone that’s ever been bullied or put down or marginalis­ed would have seen that was what was happening to me with the comments in social media. I feel sorry for the people doing it because if that’s the best use of their time they must have some pretty bleak options. I have quite a thick skin. I don’t really care what people say. I’d only be upset if they said I don’t work hard. I actually thought it would be a lot worse. What surprised me was how strongly New Zealand rallied around us.

6what Growing up in Whangarei, kind of child were you?

I wanted to be an electrical engineer. I liked making boats; I was quite a nerdy child in that sense. I went to Raumanga Middle School which was a failed Ministry of Education experiment in Form 1 to 4 schools. They ended up having to close it because no one wanted to go. I loved rugby. I played for five years at Auckland Grammar and coached for seven years.

7at Was it your own choice to board Auckland Grammar?

Yes. I don’t think Grammar’s the best school for everybody but it was absolutely the right school for me because it’s meritocrat­ic. Grammar celebrates success. You don’t get dragged down for doing too well. At school in Whangarei the view was, “You’re a smart ass” whereas at Grammar it was, “We’ll put you in a higher class”.

8counsello­r At 16 you volunteere­d as a for Kidsline; did you have any relevant experience?

No, but I was brought up to pitch in and help where you can. A friend of mine gave a seminar on Kidsline at school. He said they provide training in communicat­ion skills. It helped that the majority of volunteers were girls, who were in short supply at Grammar. I couldn’t have got elected if I hadn’t done Kidsline because they teach you to listen effectivel­y, use words that connect, show empathy and reflection. Listening is crucial in a democracy because it’s your job to represent people’s views.

9libertari­an When did you develop your philosophy?

In my final year at Grammar; the headmaster John Morris got into a public fight over the introducti­on of the NCEA. I couldn’t understand why the state, which I’d hitherto considered a benign actor, was trying to undermine one of the most important choices I’d ever made. Grammar has a proud history of standing up to the orthodoxy.

As a libertaria­n, are you anti10vacc­ination?

No, I’m not. Mum contracted polio from a vaccinatio­n when she was 6 months old; that was possible in the 50s when they used live vaccines but Mum was strongly pro-vax her whole life. She was able to rationalis­e that what happened to her was enormously unfortunat­e but it wasn’t reason to be a kook. Should vaccinatio­n be compulsory? The difficulty with compulsion in medical matters is you make doctors the policeman.

11have It says on Wikipedia that you Ma¯ ori ancestry. Do you know much about it?

My great uncles did some research and found that our family goes back to Tauwhara marae, part of the Nga¯ ti Re¯ hia hapu on the Waitangi River. We hope to visit one day but you don’t just show up and say “sorry about the last 150 years — here we are”. Act supports the Treaty settlement process but we do have a problem with the Court of Appeal interpreta­tion of government being a “partnershi­p” between two groups. I went to a ceremony the other day where we ran out of time to talk about the actual topic because of the endless speeches in the powhiri.

12cancer Was your mum’s death of in 2007 a motivation for your End of Life Choice Bill?

No, she died in a hospice comfortabl­y and relatively rapidly. The majority of people will have a good death; our palliative care profession look after us pretty well. This bill is for the small number of people who are going to be very ill at the end of their life and unable to be helped in a way they find acceptable. End of life choice is the last great human rights issue. People are now equal regardless of race, religion, gender and sexuality. All these previously public matters have become private, but how you die is still a public matter. You have a duty to spend another couple of weeks writhing in agony in order to fulfil the collective view of what a death should be.

I have quite a thick skin. I don’t really care what people say. I’d only be upset if they said I don’t work hard.

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 ?? Picture / Greg Bowker ?? David Seymour says Dancing with the Stars proved an amazingly effective platform for connecting with the public.
Picture / Greg Bowker David Seymour says Dancing with the Stars proved an amazingly effective platform for connecting with the public.
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