Brian John Donnelly (5 November 1949 – 25 September 2008) was a New Zealand politician. He was a member of the New Zealand First party.

Early life and career

Donnelly was born in Auckland, New Zealand, as the third of five children. His father worked as a fabric cutter and later as a real estate agent. Donnelly attended Sacred Heart College on a scholarship. He studied at Massey University and the University of Auckland, and received a Bachelor of Arts, a Bachelor of Education, a Master of Educational Administration, a Diploma in Teaching, and a Diploma in Second Language Teaching.

He worked in the education sector in New Zealand and the Cook Islands. His educational leadership roles included deputy principal at Titikaveka College in Rarotonga from 1977 to 1980 and principal of Whangarei Intermediate School from 1990 to 1996 (only resigning from the latter on entering parliament). Previously he had also been a lecturer at the Auckland College of Education and worked for the Education Review Office.

New Zealand First performed well in the election and Donnelly was elected a list MP. As the party's education spokesperson, when New Zealand First formed a coalition with the National Party, he became Minister Responsible for the Education Review Office, Associate Minister of Education, and Associate Minister of Pacific Island Affairs. As well as sitting as a minister outside of Cabinet, Donnelly was a member of parliament's foreign affairs, defence and trade committee. The purpose of the Act was to set an upper limit on the sewerage disposal rate paid by schools.

Donnelly was returned as a list MP for his third and fourth terms at the elections in 2002 and 2005. Through both of those terms, he chaired the education and science committee. As well as being his party's spokesperson for education and science, he also had responsibility for biosecurity, communications and information technology, industry training, local government, Pacific island affairs, and regional development.

Donnelly retired from Parliament in February 2008 to take up the role of New Zealand's High Commissioner to the Cook Islands. He was succeeded as a list member of Parliament by Dail Jones.

High Commissioner to the Cook Islands

Donnelly had a long association with the Cook Islands which included several years working there as a teacher and representing the islands in rugby. His youngest two children were adopted from the Cook Islands. He learned to speak Cook Islands Māori fluently during his time living there. His appointment as New Zealand's High Commissioner to the Cook Islands was brief, from February to August 2008, and ended when he resigned due to ill health.

In the 2008 Queen's Birthday Honours, Donnelly was appointed a Companion of the Queen's Service Order, for public services.

Personal life

Donnelly met his wife Linda through teaching and they married in 1970. They had three children, Theresa, Ioane, and Erena.

Notes

References

  • Obituary—Brian Donnelly, Hansard New Zealand Parliament
  • Obituary, Northern Advocate
  • Obituary, stuff.co.nz