The New Zealand Herald

Shaw reveals times he almost quit

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Former minister James Shaw will give his departing speech to Parliament this week and is reflecting 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.

Shaw resigned from his role as the Green Party co-leader in January after nearly nine years in the job.

He served as the previous Government’s climate change minister for six years before being appointed Associate Environmen­t Minister in Labour’s second term, where he oversaw biodiversi­ty.

Shaw previously declined to answer questions during interviews about whether he had ever threatened to quit while serving as a minister. Shaw expressed his public frustratio­n with the pace of advancemen­t with his coalition partner while serving as co-leader.

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

He said there were times when he was “really close” to calling it quits.

“There were a few times. The two most significan­t ones would’ve been when we were debating increasing our Paris [the 2030] target, prior to the Glasgow conference,” Shaw said.

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

“But 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, ‘Look, we’re gonna work out a way to get this done’.”

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

“That programme, indigenous biodiversi­ty, something in absolute crisis. We’d gone 30 years without national direction on it — there had been a number of attempts.”

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

Shaw told Q&A that he thought the Zero Carbon Act had passed its “first acid test” 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.

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James Shaw

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