Helen Clark, 2005. (credit: Sean Gallup/Getty Images)
For more information on Helen Clark, visit Britannica.com.
| Britannica Concise Encyclopedia: Helen Clark |
For more information on Helen Clark, visit Britannica.com.
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| Biography: Helen Elizabeth Clark |
New Zealand Prime Minister Helen Clark (born 1950) came to power in 1999. Also that country's longest serving member of parliament (MP), the former college lecturer had been active in politics for many years. Among her notable causes were nuclear disarmament, public health, and promotion of the arts.
Party Person
Clark was born on February 26, 1950, in Hamilton, New Zealand, the eldest of four daughters. Her father was the latest in a long line of farmers, while her mother was an elementary school teacher. Clark attended Epsom Girls Grammar School, and then went to Auckland University. It was while she was a college student in 1971 that she first became involved in politics. "Well I very deliberately went into politics," Clark told AdventureDivas.com. "When I was a student, I got very involved in political issues. I joined the Labour (sic) Party so I could follow those interests through. It's been a very deliberate decision, you don't just drift in."
Clark received her M.A. in political studies from Auckland in 1974. While working on her Ph.D. in rural politics, she began teaching at the university as a junior lecturer (1973 - 1975). During that time, she also maintained her political interests as president of the Labor Youth Council and a member of the Auckland Labor Regional Council. After an unsuccessful bid for a parliamentary seat from Piako, Clark went abroad to further her education under a University Grants Committee post - graduate scholarship in 1976. That same year, she represented her party at the Socialist International Congress and the Socialist International Women's Congress (responsibilities she held again in 1978, 1983, and 1986). It was a pattern of keeping her hand in both the political arena and academia that would follow for the next few years.
In 1977, Clark returned to New Zealand and took a job lecturing in political studies at her alma mater. Also that year, she served as secretary of the Labor Women's Council. Continuing her rise through the party ranks, Clark became a party executive in 1978, a position she still held in 2004, except for a brief hiatus from 1988 to 1989. In 1981, she represented Labor in an Asia - Pacific Socialist Organization Conference in Sydney, Australia. More importantly, 1981 was also the year that Clark was able to abandon her duel pursuits and concentrate on politics alone.
"Mother of the House"
Clark was first elected as a member of parliament (MP), representing the Mt. Albert electorate, in 1981 (a seat she still held in 2004). The victory allowed her to give up her position at the university and concentrate on her increasingly important roles both in the Labor Party and New Zealand's government.
During Clark's first term as MP, she was a member of the Statutes Revision Committee. Her next term's (1984 - 1987) service included positions as chairperson of the Foreign Affairs and Defense Select Committee, chairperson of the ad hoc Disarmament and Arms Control Select Committee and of the former Foreign Affairs Select Committee, and member of the Government Administration Select Committee. She also convened the External Affairs and Security Committee. In 1985, Clark was a delegate to the world conference that marked the end of the United Nations Decade for Women. The following year, she was honored with the annual Peace Prize of the Danish Peace Foundation for her efforts toward international peace and disarmament.
As her career progressed, Clark had the opportunity to expand her breadth of knowledge and experience by serving in several key positions in New Zealand's cabinet. Among these were minister of conservation (August 1987 until January 1989), minister of housing (August 1987 until August 1989), and minister of labor and health (1989 - 1990). In the latter role, she was instrumental in the enactment of tobacco control legislation. 1989 also saw Clark make history as the first female New Zealander to become deputy prime minister. In that position, she chaired the Cabinet Social Equity Committee, and was a member of such important groups as the Cabinet's Policy Committee, Economic Development and Employment Committee, and Domestic and External Security Committee. In 1990, Clark made history again as New Zealand's first woman member of the Privy Council. Meanwhile, the political climate was changing.
The Labor Party lost the 1990 election and Clark became deputy leader of the opposition. In that capacity, she was her party's spokesperson for health and labor and a member of the Social Services Select Committee and the Labor Select Committee. In December of 1993, Clark took over as leader of the opposition. She held that post until 1999, when the Labor Party's fortunes changed again. By that time, Clark's distinguished service as the longest running female MP in parliament had earned her the moniker "Mother of the House."
Prime Minister
In 1996, New Zealand introduced a proportional electoral system, known as the MMP, in which voters each cast two ballots - one for a political party and one for a local MP. Any party that receives more than 5% of the vote is entitled to parliamentary representation, whether any of its candidates win a seat or not. The result of the system often was a coalition of political parties in control of Parliament and ensured proportional representation of the people. Thus, when the Labor Party returned to power in 1999, it was in partnership with the Alliance Party, itself a coalition of five small leftist parties. Clark was elected prime minister on November 27, 1999.
New Zealand's new prime minister was known for her strong personality and outspoken views. An ardent champion of the arts, devoted pacifist, keen environmentalist, and avid outdoorswoman, Clark's popularity had been increasing since the mid - 1990s. Her new coalition government was committed to such liberal policies as the reduction of inequality (with a special emphasis on the inequities dealt New Zealand's native Maori population), a sustainable environment, and improvement in the greater social and economic welfare of the people. More specifically, Clark described her personal leadership style to Time International as, "Direct, open, blunt, a lot of contact with media. You get accused of being the Minister of Everything, but I think most journalists would admit that the reason I offer opinions on things is because they ring and ask, and I do have the fundamental belief that the buck stops at the top and that people are entitled to know what the (p)rime (m)inister thinks."
Upon Clark's election, she also became minister for arts, culture, and heritage, along with minister in charge of the New Zealand Security Intelligence Service. The former was in keeping with her longstanding support of the arts. ". . . I think that through the arts and culture you express the soul and heart of your nation," Clark told AdventureDivas.com. ". . . . We have wonderful painters, wonderful ceramicists. We have very high standards in the performing arts. We have a lot of new creative material across theater and music coming through. It's a very vibrant and lively art scene. And it has responded to the official encouragement - which has come with some more funding - extremely well." Clark's administration allocated $142 million (NZ dollars) to the arts over a four year period.
Other important policies of the Clark administration included the Employment Relations Act 2000 (to bolster "good faith" employment), an extensive biodiversity conservation strategy, financial support for Maori land claims (along with a revitalized recognition of the 1840 Treaty of Waitangi between the Maori and the British), and the 2001 Disability Strategy and Positive Aging Strategy. One of the most noteworthy foreign policy moves was Clark's February 2002 visit to Washington, D.C. in support of U.S. President George W. Bush's "War on Terror." The Labor Party had stopped bilateral military ties with the United States in 1986, reflecting New Zealand's anti - nuclear policy, and Clark's 2002 trip was the first meeting between a Labor official and U.S. president since that time.
Clark's prime ministry was not without its critics, of course. Among her unpopular decisions were the raising of taxes for the wealthy, liberal immigration policies, and worker - friendly legislation (such as the above - mentioned Employment Relations Act 2000). Nonetheless, assisted by a particularly poor performance by the conservative National Party and the upswing in strength of smaller parties - part of what the electoral innovations of 1996 were designed to accomplish - Clark won another term as prime minister in July of 2002.
New Zealand in the Future
Much of what Clark saw as her mission as prime minister was to ensure the financial future of her small country in a global economy. She recognized the problems posed by emigration of New Zealand's citizens and the inherent difficulties of being tiny. She told Time International, "Our biggest companies don't rate on a radar screen internationally, so you have to create an interest in New Zealand that wouldn't be there on the basis of its size and importance. That's why I think publicity and promotions - you do it around an event like the America's Cup. That's so important, because people who would never have any other reason to come to New Zealand take an interest. You get people who have a lot of money to throw around with an interest which (sic) can be stimulatory. But a small country in a globalized economy has to work very hard to be noticed."
So work hard she did. One way Clark went about it was attracting both the film industry and tourism to New Zealand. A major boon was the phenomenal success of the New Zealand - made Lord of the Rings trilogy. The filming itself created 20,000 jobs in the country and injected millions into the economy. It also paved the way for other movies to be shot there, including The Last Samurai, starring Tom Cruise. But even more significantly, it attracted tourists in record numbers. By 2004, international tourists had burgeoned to over 2 million people.
As to the emigration problem, Clark had a message for those people as well. ". . . The life - style is without parallel, and that in a globalized age of information technology, you can be entrepreneurial anywhere in the world and do well," she told Time International. "There's no reason you can't be a leading software writer, a leading product designer, from New Zealand - and many are - buy we've got (sic) to get that image across to ourselves, build that confidence in ourselves that these things can be done from New Zealand. By all mean, go out and try the world. It's exciting, it's interesting, but actually, there's a lot going for New Zealand, too."
Books
Worldmark Encyclopedia of the Nations: World Leaders, Gale Group, 2003.
Periodicals
Europe Intelligence Wire, March 1, 2004.
Independent (London, England), October 13, 1996.
Time International, August 14, 2000.
Online
"Biography of the Prime Minister of New Zealand," http://www.primeminister.govt.nz/frame-biography.html (December 4, 2004).
"Forbes: Helen Clark, 43rd Most Powerful Woman in the World," National Business Review, August 21, 2004, http://www.nbr.co.nz/print/print.asp?id=9952&cid;=15&cname;=Politics (December 4, 2004).
"Helen Clark," SYB World, http://www.sybworld.com/views/entrytext/nz/person/Helen - Clark (December 4, 2004).
"Helen Clark and Zohra Yusuf Daoud," ABC Online, April 14, 2002, http://www.abc.net.au/sundayprofile/stories/s557285.htm (December 4, 2004).
"Helen Clark, Prime Minister," AdventureDivas, http://www.adventuredivas.com/divas/article.view?page=245 (December 4, 2004).
"Helen Clark, Prime Minister (interview)," AdventureDivas, http://www.pbs.org/adventuredivas/nz/divas/clark.html (December 4, 2004).
| Columbia Encyclopedia: Helen Clark |
| Wikipedia: Helen Clark |
| The Right Honourable Helen Elizabeth Clark |
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| Incumbent | |
| Assumed office 17 April 2009 |
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| Secretary-General | Ban Ki-Moon |
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| Preceded by | Kemal Derviş |
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| In office 5 December 1999 – 19 November 2008 |
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| Monarch | Elizabeth II |
| Governor General | Michael Hardie Boys Silvia Cartwright Anand Satyanand |
| Deputy | Jim Anderton Michael Cullen |
| Preceded by | Jenny Shipley |
| Succeeded by | John Key |
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| In office 1 December 1993 – 5 December 1999 |
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| Deputy | Michael Cullen |
| Preceded by | Mike Moore |
| Succeeded by | Jenny Shipley |
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| In office 8 August 1989 – 2 November 1990 |
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| Prime Minister | Geoffrey Palmer Mike Moore |
| Preceded by | Geoffrey Palmer |
| Succeeded by | Don McKinnon |
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29th Minister of Health
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| In office 30 January 1989 – 2 November 1990 |
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| Prime Minister | David Lange Geoffrey Palmer Mike Moore |
| Preceded by | David Caygill |
| Succeeded by | Simon Upton |
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| In office 28 November 1981 – 17 April 2009[1] |
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| Preceded by | Warren Freer |
| Succeeded by | David Shearer |
| Majority | 14,749[2] |
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| Born | 26 February 1950 Hamilton, New Zealand |
| Political party | Labour |
| Spouse(s) | Peter Davis |
| Occupation | Politician |
| Religion | Agnostic[3] |
Helen Elizabeth Clark (born 26 February 1950), a New Zealand politician and administrator, is the head of the United Nations Development Programme, the third-highest UN position. Clark was the 37th Prime Minister of New Zealand for three consecutive terms from 1999 to 2008 and led the Labour Party from 1993 until it lost the 2008 general election. Before resigning from Parliament in April 2009, Clark was Labour's foreign affairs spokeswoman and MP for the Mount Albert electorate which she had held since 1981.[4] Forbes magazine ranked her 20th most powerful woman in the world in 2006.[5]
Contents |
Clark was the eldest of four daughters of a Waikato farming family. Her mother, Margaret McMurray, of Irish birth, was a primary school teacher. Her father, George, a farmer, supported the National Party at the 1981 election. Clark studied at Te Pahu Primary School, at Epsom Girls' Grammar School in Auckland and at the University of Auckland, where she majored in politics and graduated with an MA (Honours) in 1974. Her thesis focused on rural political behaviour and representation.[6]
In 1971 Clark assisted Labour candidates to the Auckland City Council.[7] Clark was a junior lecturer in political studies at the University of Auckland from 1973 to 1975. In 1974 she sought the nomination for the Auckland Central electorate, but lost to Richard Prebble.[7] Clark studied abroad on a University Grants Committee post-graduate scholarship in 1976, and then lectured in political studies at Auckland again while undertaking her PhD (which she never completed) from 1977 until her election to Parliament in 1981.
She married sociologist Peter Davis, her partner of five years at that time, shortly before that election (under pressure from some members of the New Zealand Labour Party to marry despite her own feelings about marriage – her biography reports that she cried throughout the ceremony, although she attributes that to a headache).[8] Dr Davis currently[update] is a professor in medical sociology and heads the Sociology Department at the University of Auckland.
As a teenager Clark became politically active, protesting against the Vietnam War and campaigning against foreign military bases in New Zealand. She has declared herself agnostic.[3]
Clark has worked actively in the New Zealand Labour Party for most of her life. She served as a member of the Party's New Zealand executive from 1978 until September 1988 and again from April 1989. She chaired the University of Auckland Princes Street branch of the Labour Party during her studies, becoming active alongside future Labour Party politicians including Richard Prebble, David Caygill, Margaret Wilson, and Richard Northey. Clark held the positions of president of the Labour Youth Council, executive member of the Party's Auckland Regional Council, secretary of the Labour Women's Council and member of the Policy Council.
She represented the New Zealand Labour Party at the congresses of the Socialist International and of the Socialist International Women in 1976, 1978, 1983 and 1986, at an Asia-Pacific Socialist Organisation Conference held in Sydney in 1981, and at the Socialist International Party Leaders' Meeting in Sydney in 1991.
| Years | Term | Electorate | List | Party |
| 1981–1984 | 40th | Mt Albert | Labour | |
| 1984–1987 | 41st | Mt Albert | Labour | |
| 1987–1990 | 42nd | Mt Albert | Labour | |
| 1990–1993 | 43rd | Mt Albert | Labour | |
| 1993–1996 | 44th | Mt Albert | Labour | |
| 1996–1999 | 45th | Owairaka | 1 | Labour |
| 1999–2002 | 46th | Mt Albert | 1 | Labour |
| 2002–2005 | 47th | Mt Albert | 1 | Labour |
| 2005–2008 | 48th | Mt Albert | 1 | Labour |
| 2008–2009 | 49th | Mt Albert | 1 | Labour |
Helen Clark first gained election to the New Zealand House of Representatives in the 1981 general election as one of four women who entered Parliament on that occasion. In winning the Mount Albert electorate in Auckland, she became the second woman elected to represent an Auckland electorate, and the seventeenth woman elected to the New Zealand Parliament. At the 2005 general election Clark won 66% of the electorate votes, or 20,918 votes with a 14,749 majority.[2] During her first term in the House (1981 - 1984), she became a member of the Statutes Revision Committee. In her second term (1984 - 1987), she chaired the Select Committee on Foreign Affairs and the Select Committee on Disarmament and Arms Control, both of which combined with the Defence Select Committee in 1985 to form a single committee.
In 1987, Clark became a Cabinet Minister in the Fourth Labour Government, led by David Lange (1984-1989), Geoffrey Palmer (1989-1990) and Mike Moore (1990), first as Minister of Housing and as Minister of Conservation, then as Minister of Health and later as Deputy Prime Minister.
Clark served as Minister of Conservation from August 1987 until January 1989 and as Minister of Housing from August 1987 until August 1989. She became Minister of Health in January 1989 and Minister of Labour and Deputy Prime Minister in August 1989. She chaired the Cabinet Social Equity Committee and became a member of the Cabinet Policy Committee, of the Cabinet Committee on Chief Executives, of the Cabinet Economic Development and Employment Committee, of the Cabinet Expenditure Review Committee, of the Cabinet State Agencies Committee, of the Cabinet Honours Appointments and Travel Committee and of the Cabinet Domestic and External Security Committee.
From October 1990 until December 1993 Clark held the posts of Deputy Leader of the Opposition, Opposition spokesperson for Health and Labour and member of the Social Services Select Committee and of the Labour Select Committee. After the National Party won the 1993 general election with a majority of one seat, Clark challenged Mike Moore for the leadership of the parliamentary Labour Party and became Leader of the Opposition on 1 December 1993. She led the Opposition during the National-led Governments of Jim Bolger (1990-1997) and Jenny Shipley (1997-1999).
When the New Zealand Labour Party came into office as part of a coalition following the 1999 election, Clark became the second female Prime Minister of New Zealand and the first to have won office at an election. (The previous Prime Minister, Jenny Shipley took office as the result of a mid-term party-leadership challenge.) During her term in office women have held a number of prominent offices in New Zealand, such as the Queen, Governor-General, Speaker of the House of Representatives and Chief Justice.
Clark was Prime Minister and Minister for Arts, Culture and Heritage from 1999 until 2008. She also had ministerial responsibility for the New Zealand Security Intelligence Service and for Ministerial Services. Her particular interests included social policy and international affairs.
As Prime Minister, Helen Clark was a member of the Council of Women World Leaders, an International network of current and former women presidents and prime ministers whose mission is to mobilise the highest-level women leaders globally for collective action on issues of critical importance to women and equitable development.
As Leader of the Labour Party, Clark negotiated the formation of successive minority coalition governments. Even though some commentators[citation needed] saw stable government within the relatively new MMP electoral system as unlikely, Clark's supporters[citation needed] credit her with maintaining three terms of stable MMP government.
The first such coalition (1999-2002) linked the Labour Party with the Alliance Party (1999).
In 2000, Labour MP Chris Carter investigated the background of one of Clark's Cabinet colleagues, Māori Affairs Minister Dover Samuels. During the investigation, Clark referred to John Yelash as a murderer. However, the court system had convicted Yelash of manslaughter. Yelash sued Clark for defamation, resulting in an out-of-court settlement.
In 2000, the then Police Commissioner, Peter Doone, resigned after the Sunday Star-Times alleged he had prevented the breath testing of his partner Robyn, who had driven the car they occupied, by telling the officer "that won't be necessary". Both Doone and the officer involved denied this happened. Doone sued the Sunday Star-Times for defamation in 2005 but the paper revealed they had checked the story with Clark. She confirmed this, but denied that she had made attempts to get Doone to resign and defended being the source as "by definition I cannot leak". Helen Clark also responded by saying that National's friends had funded Mr Doone's defamation-suit.[9] Opinion on the significance of this incident varied.[10]
In a report in the People's Daily, Chinese President Jiang Zemin referred to Clark as an "old friend". He hoped to "establish bilateral long-term and stable overall cooperative relations with a healthy development geared to the 21st century", and "broad prospects for bilateral economic cooperation". Clark had strongly supported China's entry into the WTO.[11]
Clark signed a painting for a charity-auction that someone else had painted. A political controversy arose about it, and after it emerged that she had not painted it, Opposition politicians referred the matter to the New Zealand Police. The Police found evidence for a prima facie case of forgery, but determined that it was not in the public interest to prosecute.[12] A staff member bought the painting back and destroyed it.
In 1999, Clark was involved in a defamation case in the High Court of New Zealand with Auckland orthopaedic surgeon Joe Brownlee, resulting in Clark making an unreserved apology. The case centered on a press statement issued by Clark criticising Brownlee, triggered by a constituent's complaint over the outcome of a hip replacement. Clark admitted the criticism was unjustified in that the complication suffered by her constituent was rare, unforeseen and unavoidable.[13]
The coalition with the Alliance Party collapsed in 2002. In consequence, Clark called an early election and then went into coalition with Jim Anderton's Progressive Party, a spin-off of the Alliance Party (2002, with parliamentary confidence and supply coming from United Future and a "good-faith" agreement with the Green Party).
| “ | I think it's inevitable that New Zealand will become a republic and that would reflect the reality that New Zealand is a totally sovereign-independent 21st century nation 12,000 miles from the United Kingdom | ” |
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— Prime Minister Helen Clark, [14] |
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Clark supports New Zealand becoming a republic, and her term in office saw a number of alleged moves in this direction, under her government's policy of building national identity. Examples include the abolition of appeals to the Privy Council and the setting up of the Supreme Court of New Zealand, the abolition of titular Knighthood and Damehood honours, and the abolition of the title "Queen's Counsel" (replaced by "Senior Counsel").
In 2002, Clark took an unprecedented step and said sorry for New Zealand's treatment of Samoa during the colonial era. Clark's apology was made in Apia during the 40th anniversary of Samoa's independence and televised live to New Zealand where Samoans applauded the prime minister's gesture.[15]
In March 2003, referring to the U.S. led coalition's actions in the Iraq War, Clark told the newspaper Sunday Star Times that, "I don't think that September 11 under a Gore presidency would have had this consequence for Iraq." She later sent a letter to Washington apologising for any offence that her comment may have caused.[16]
On 17 July 2004, a motorcade involving police, Diplomatic Protection Squad, and Ministerial Services staff reached speeds of up to 172 km/h when taking Clark and Cabinet Minister Jim Sutton from Waimate to Christchurch Airport so she could attend a rugby union match in Wellington.[17] The courts subsequently convicted the drivers involved for driving offences, but appeals resulted in the quashing of these convictions in December 2005 and August 2006.[18] Clark said that she was busy working in the back seat and had no influence or role in the decision to speed and did not realise the speed of her vehicle.[19]
In 2005, following the election of that year, the Labour Party and the Progressive Party renewed their coalition, gaining supply-and-confidence support from both New Zealand First and United Future in exchange for giving the leaders of those parties ministerial positions outside Cabinet.
On 24 July 2008 Clark passed Sir Robert Muldoon to become New Zealand's sixth-longest-serving Prime Minister, and on 27 October 2008 she passed Edward Stafford's combined terms to become the 5th longest-serving Prime Minister.
On 8 February 2008, Clark became the longest serving leader of the Labour Party in its history (although some dispute exists over when Harry Holland became leader), having served for 14 years, 69 days,[20][i], by 26 October 2008 she had passed Holland's longest possible term and her position as longest serving Labour Party leader was put beyond doubt. Clark conceded defeat following the 2008 general election to John Key and announced that she was standing down as Labour Party leader.[21] On 11 November 2008 Clark was replaced by Phil Goff as leader of the Labour Party.[22]
In 2006, Forbes ranked Clark 20th of "The World's 100 Most Powerful Women"[5] and then at 56th in 2008[23].
Helen Clark became the Administrator of the United Nations Development Programme on April 17, 2009, and is the first woman to lead the organization. She is also the Chair of the United Nations Development Group, a committee consisting of the heads of all UN funds, programmes and departments working on development issues.[24] The current government of New Zealand strongly supported her nomination, along with Australia, the Pacific Island nations and Prime Minister of the United Kingdom, Gordon Brown. She also received the support of the five countries on the UNDP board (Iran, Haiti, Serbia, The Netherlands and Tanzania) and was unanimously confirmed by the General Assembly on March 31. She was officially sworn in by UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon on April 27, 2009.[25][26][27][28]
In this position, Forbes deemed her the 61st most powerful woman in the world.[29]
The government of the Solomon Islands awarded Clark (together with John Howard) the Star of the Solomon Islands in 2005 in recognition of New Zealand's role in restoring law and order in the Solomon Islands.[30] This award allows her to use the post-nominal letters "SSI".[31]
| “ | Our prime minister has been rather unique in being a great lover of the out of doors and she's always off climbing something, doing something exciting and I think that New Zealanders admire that. That is sort of the way of life that they have come to accept in our little old island in the south seas. But Helen as been particularly strong in this respect. So long may she reign. | ” |
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—Sir Edmund Hillary[32] |
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In January 2008 Clark won the United Nations Environment Programme Champions of the Earth award in recognition of the government’s promotion of sustainability initiatives.[33]
Clark is an Honorary Member of The International Raoul Wallenberg Foundation.[34]
In January 2009, two months after losing office, Clark was voted Greatest Living New Zealander in an opt-in website poll run by the New Zealand Herald. In a close race she received 25 percent of the vote, ahead of Victoria Cross recipient Willie Apiata at 21 percent. Current Prime Minister John Key said he was not surprised by the poll, saying "... she is well thought of as a New Zealand Prime Minister."[35]
In April 2009 she was awarded honorary Doctor of Laws degree by University of Auckland.[36]
| Wikimedia Commons has media related to: Helen Clark |
| Parliament of New Zealand | ||
|---|---|---|
| Preceded by Warren Freer |
Member of Parliament for Mt Albert 1981 – 2009 |
Succeeded by David Shearer |
| Party political offices | ||
| Preceded by Mike Moore |
Leader of the Opposition 1993 – 1999 |
Succeeded by Jenny Shipley |
| Leader of the New Zealand Labour Party 1993 – 2008 |
Succeeded by Phil Goff |
|
| Political offices | ||
| Preceded by Jenny Shipley |
Prime Minister of New Zealand 1999 – 2008 |
Succeeded by John Key |
| Preceded by Geoffrey Palmer |
Deputy Prime Minister of New Zealand 1989 – 1990 |
Succeeded by Don McKinnon |
| Preceded by David Caygill |
Minister of Health 1989 – 1990 |
Succeeded by Simon Upton |
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