David Lange: My Life: Difference between revisions

Jump to navigation Jump to search
no edit summary
No edit summary
No edit summary
Line 18: Line 18:


But Muldoon — still caretaker prime minister, pending the swearing-in of the new government, was not done with his wrecking. He promptly precipitated a constitutional crisis — and a dramatic run on the [[New Zealand dollar]] — by publicly refusing the new administration’s instruction to devalue the [[Kiwi]]. There was so little money left that Lange instructed New Zealand’s international diplomatic staff around the world to ''max out their credit cards'' so there would be money to pay the bills.  
But Muldoon — still caretaker prime minister, pending the swearing-in of the new government, was not done with his wrecking. He promptly precipitated a constitutional crisis — and a dramatic run on the [[New Zealand dollar]] — by publicly refusing the new administration’s instruction to devalue the [[Kiwi]]. There was so little money left that Lange instructed New Zealand’s international diplomatic staff around the world to ''max out their credit cards'' so there would be money to pay the bills.  
{{quote|We actually were reduced to asking our diplomatic posts abroad how much money they could draw down on their credit cards! That is the extent of the calamity that had been ground into us by the briefings that we’d got.}}


====In the end====
====In the end====
Ultimately the Lange administration will be seen in the wider geopolitical context of the 1980s perhaps as something that was going to happen at some point anyway, but when one looks at the vibrant, dynamic and diverse culture, economy and polity that New Zealand enjoys today, and compare it with the staid and stultifying one which Lange took on in 1984, one can only tip one’s hat to the man who actually did start that process rolling and acknowledge this very personal record of the events.
Ultimately the Lange administration will be seen in the wider geopolitical context of the 1980s perhaps as something that was going to happen at some point anyway, but when one looks at the vibrant, dynamic and diverse culture, economy and polity that New Zealand enjoys today, and compare it with the staid and stultifying one which Lange took on in 1984, one can only tip one’s hat to the man who actually did start that process rolling and acknowledge this very personal record of the events.


In 1984 Lange’s soon-to-be predecessor, the [[Wage and price freeze|late unlamented]] [[Robert Muldoon|Rob Muldoon]], left a sarcastic epitaph, reflexively, in the course of being pasted in a televised political debate: when stumped for anything to else say at all, barked bitterly: “I love you, Mister Lange".
In 1984 Lange’s soon-to-be predecessor, the late unlamented [[Robert Muldoon|Rob Muldoon]], left a sarcastic epitaph, reflexively, in the course of being pasted in a televised political debate: when stumped for anything to else say at all, barked bitterly: “I love you, Mister Lange.


A few years on, with plenty of hindsight and more wounds healed by time, this might yet — without Muldoon’s ironic veneer — grow to be the received wisdom about David Russell Lange’s contribution to New Zealand’s political history.
A few years on, with plenty of hindsight and more wounds healed by time, this might yet — without Muldoon’s ironic veneer — grow to be the received wisdom about David Russell Lange’s contribution to New Zealand’s political history.

Navigation menu