Tom Weal

Thomas K Weal (born 1929) was a New Zealand politician for the Social Credit Party.

Political career

Weal served as Social Credit's Deputy leader from 1970 until 1972.[1] He worked as a teacher at St Peter's College in Auckland[2] where one of his students, Stefan Lipa was influenced by him in social credit theory and later became the Social Credit Party President between 1979 and 1987. Another of his students was John Tamihere later a Member of Parliament (1999-2005) (for the Labour Party) and a cabinet Minister (2002-2004). Tamihere was considerably influenced by Tom Weal.[3]

Weal stood as a Social Credit candidate in numerous elections (usually in the electorate of Mt Albert), as well as in by-elections in Fendalton and Hutt in 1967 and 1968 respectively. He was notably misquoted with regards to comments on unemployment during the 1968 Hutt by-election.[4] Weal was sent by party leader John O'Brien to the United Kingdom in 1971 in an effort to stop the UK joining the European Economic Community, which Social Crediter's in New Zealand were deeply concerned about.[1] In Britain, Weal stated that the British public was not aware of the damage which New Zealand would suffer if Britain joined the Common Market without safeguards for her primary produce. He spent three weeks talking to anti-market groups in England. He promoted a special arrangement for New Zealand if Britain entered the EEC. Weal said he had found that very few people knew exactly what joining the EEC meant for Britain. He thought that that was why there was a great fear of going into Europe at the time. He said: "The public just doesn't know what's going on in Brussels. For this reason they're interested in hearing the Commonwealth view on the negotiations and that's what I've tried to express." Weal was invited to return to Britain and was urged to bring a member of the New Zealand Labour Party with him. "We wouldn't be here to play politics, but just to let people know what's in it for us if Britain joins the EEC," he said. He rejected the idea that he was "meddling" in British politics. "In fact one of the most successful things I did was to deliver a letter outlining New Zealand's objections to British membership to every MP before the Common Market debate," he said. Weal thought that letter had an influence in the fact that more than 100 Labour members signed a petition opposing the entry negotiations.[5]

Weal quit the Social Credit party with O'Brien in 1972 and joined the New Democratic Party. That party unsuccessfully contested the 1972 electionn.[6] Weal was later involved with the short lived Christian Democrat party in the 1980s.

Notes

  1. 1 2 Bryant 1981, p. 25.
  2. Elliott 2015, pp. 103-106; 263-264.
  3. Tamihere, John; Bain, Helen (2004). John Tamihere: Black and White. Auckland: Reed Publishing (NZ). pp. 33–44. ISBN 0-7900-0964-1.
  4. Wilde, Roger (19 August 1968). "Mr. Weal Clarifies Position". Salient (Wellington). Retrieved 18 August 2015.
  5. NZPA Staff Correspondent, Britons in Dark about EEC Says Mr Weal, New Zealand Herald, 25 January 1971, p. 5.
  6. Bryant 1981, p. 33.

References

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