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Phil Holloway

New Zealand politician

Phil Holloway

Summary

New Zealand politician

FieldValue
honorific-prefixThe Honourable
namePhil Holloway
honorific-suffix
imagePhil Holloway, 1951 (1).jpg
order121st Minister of Industries and Commerce
term_start112 December 1957
term_end112 December 1960
primeminister1Walter Nash
predecessor1Eric Halstead
successor1Jack Marshall
constituency_MP2Heretaunga
parliament2New Zealand
term_start213 November 1954
term_end212 December 1960
predecessor2new constituency
successor2Ron Bailey
birth_date22 March 1917
birth_placeHokitika, New Zealand
death_date
death_placeNew Zealand
spouseJoyce Martin (m. 1946)
Beverley Woolf (1963–2003)
children2, including Liddy Holloway
relativesJoel Tobeck (grandson)
partyLabour
allegianceNew Zealand Army
serviceyears1940–45
rank[[File:British & Commonwealth - Army - 2Lt (1920–1953).svg10px]] Second Lieutenant
unit26th Battalion
battlesWorld War II

|honorific-prefix = The Honourable |honorific-suffix = Beverley Woolf (1963–2003)

Philip North Holloway (22 March 1917 – 28 May 2003) was a New Zealand politician of the Labour Party.

Early life and career

Holloway was born in Hokitika in 1917. His father was an Anglican parson and he received his secondary education at Waitaki Boys' High School. He attended the University of Otago, but did not finish his degree because he went overseas in 1936. He was a door-to-door salesmen for vacuum cleaners in England before undertaking more study at Boston University. He then became a public circuit lecturer in the United States before returning to London and briefly became an assistant to prominent Labour MP Sir Stafford Cripps from 1938 to 1939. Upon returning to New Zealand he briefly worked for 2ZB. When World War II broke out, Holloway joined the army. He was a second lieutenant with the 26th Battalion, and saw service in North Africa and Italy.

Returning to New Zealand following the war he married Joyce Martin in 1946, with whom he had one daughter. From 1947 to 1950 he was an importer-distributor and was a member of the Price Tribunal. He was for a time the secretary of the Wellington Journalists Union and later employed by the Labour Party from 1953 to 1954. He was a "loyal Orangeman" and disliked the Catholic Irish.

Political career

Holloway in his office, 1959

He stood in the in the electorate, but was defeated by the incumbent, Matthew Oram of the National Party. At the 1947 local-body elections he stood unsuccessfully for the Wellington City Council on a Labour ticket (along with all other Labour candidates). In the , he unsuccessfully stood in the electorate.

He represented the Heretaunga electorate from 1954 to 1960, when he retired. He was both Minister of Industries and Commerce and Minister for Science and Industrial Research from 1957 to 1960 in the Second Labour Government. In that role, he was involved in the negotiations with Australia and eventually led to a free trade agreement. Holloway initiated several capital works initiatives to improve New Zealand's manufacturing capacity. He oversaw the construction of the Tiwai Point Aluminium Smelter, the Marsden Point Oil Refinery and New Zealand Steel's mill at Glenbrook. Another, a cotton mill in Nelson, was cancelled after National won the .

Holloway had one of the largest majorities of any member of Parliament when he surprisingly decided he would not seek re-election in the . By then he was disillusioned by politics and rationalised his unexpected departure stating there is "only so much one could do in politics".

Looming over his retirement, was the fact he had been involved in a very public stoush due to a libel case. In Truth (NZ) Ltd v Holloway, he sued the tabloid newspaper New Zealand Truth for libel after an article in its 24 March 1959 issue which featured an article "This Ex-Russian's Export Licences Should Be Investigated" which demanded an immediate government inquiry into dealings between Henry Judd, an émigré importer, and Warren Freer, Labour MP for . It quoted the importer as saying he had an ease-of-passage remedy for controlled imports, stating: "See Phil, and Phil will fix it", and reported that the reference was to Holloway who as Minister of Industries and Commerce was in charge of import controls. Holloway vehemently denied the suggestion and sued the paper for libel and sought in damages. The nation was gripped by the trial which focused heavily on the derivations and meanings of the word "fix". The defence led by Robin Cooke took appeals all the way to the Privy Council in London. The court case that lasted 14 months, and eventually he was awarded in damages and a further in costs, a record sum for the times.

Holloway's early retirement also had other reasons. He wrote to Prime Minister Walter Nash early in 1960 to inform him he would not be standing again. Privately he lamented the fact that neither caucus nor party member meetings had energy or enthusiasm any more. In the letter Holloway remarked that he thought Labour's party organisation was "pathetically weak" and that the future of both the party and the government was "not bright until there is a re-assessment of our [Labour's] policy and objectives, and also a re-vitalizing of our organisation".

Post-politics

In 1962, Holloway became manager of the New Zealand branch of the Chandris Shipping Lines. In 1963, after divorcing his first wife Joyce, he married Beverley Woolf with whom he would have another daughter. He remained an active member of the Labour Party and stood twice for the party presidency. He unsuccessfully challenged incumbent president Norman Douglas at both the 1967 and 1968 party conferences.

In 1973, following the election of the Third Labour Government, Holloway was appointed as Ambassador to Italy (with cross-accreditation to Yugoslavia, Egypt and Iraq) and High Commissioner to Malta from 1973 to 1976.

After his return to New Zealand, he became company director of an export company until he retired in 1989. He was a co-owner of a number of successful race horses with his friend Woolf Fisher.

In the 1987 Queen's Birthday Honours, Holloway was appointed a Companion of the Order of St Michael and St George, for public services. He was genuinely surprised with the award.

Death

In early 2001 he became unwell and increasingly disabled following a series of small strokes. Holloway died on 28 May 2003. He was survived by his second wife Beverley, two daughters and one stepson from his second marriage. His funeral was attended by Labour leaders, including then Prime Minister Helen Clark.

Family

One of his daughters was actor and writer Liddy Holloway and a grandson is actor Joel Tobeck.

Notes

References

References

  1. Falconer, Phoebe. (7 June 2003). "Obituary: Philip Holloway". [[The New Zealand Herald]].
  2. Kitchin, Peter. (12 June 2003). "Truth left begging in Holloway case". [[The Dominion Post (Wellington).
  3. Freer, Warren W. (2004). "A Lifetime in Politics: the memoirs of Warren Freer". [[Victoria University Press]].
  4. (1947). "The General Election, 1946". [[National Library of New Zealand.
  5. Norrie, J. (1 December 1947). "Declaration of Election Results". [[Wellington City Council]].
  6. "The New Zealand Official Year-Book, 1951–52". [[Statistics New Zealand]].
  7. (9 May 1967). "Labour Officers". [[The Evening Post (New Zealand).
  8. (7 May 1968). "Mr Douglas Again President of NZ Labour Party". [[The Evening Post (New Zealand).
  9. {{London Gazette. (13 June 1987)
  10. [http://www.nzonscreen.com/person/liddy-holloway?tab=biography Liddy Holloway – Biography]. New Zealand On Screen. Retrieved 20 January 2013.
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