Harman Patil (Editor)

Gerald O'Brien

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Preceded by
  
Arnold Nordmeyer

Political party
  
Labour

Years of service
  
1942–45

Succeeded by
  
Frank O'Flynn

Allegiance
  
RNZAF

Party
  
New Zealand Labour Party

Gerald O'Brien httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsaa

Born
  
2 December 1924 Wellington, New Zealand (
1924-12-02
)

Spouse(s)
  
Fausta O'Brien (m. 1956)

Gerald o brien professional horse breaker and trainer


John Gerald O’Brien (born 2 December 1924), known as Gerald O'Brien, is a former New Zealand soldier and politician of the Labour Party.

Contents

Early life

O'Brien was born in Wellington in 1924. He joined the Royal New Zealand Air Force (RNZAF) in 1942 when he was 17 and trained as a radar operator in Harewood and Wigram. He did not see overseas' service as the Americans "had enough manpower in [that] area".

Political career

In 1950 he was a Wellington City councillor, and suggested to Frank Kitts that he should stand on behalf of Labour for the mayor and council; Kitts was the highest-polling councillor, although he did not win the mayoralty until 1956.

He represented the Island Bay electorate from 1969 to 1978. In 1974 O’Brien as party vice-president was on the panel to choose the successor to Norman Kirk in the Sydenham electorate. Initially the three electorate representatives wanted John Kirk and the three head office nominees wanted the party secretary John Wybrow. O'Brien switched his vote to John Kirk, who got the nod.

He was charged over an incident in 1976 in Christchurch, where he allegedly asked two boys back to his motel room for a drink. The charges were thrown out, and O'Brien maintains that it was nothing but an attempt by political enemies to "get rid of me". He also stated that he got more sympathy from members of the National Party than from his own party. He was subsequently deselected by Labour for the Island Bay electorate. In 1978, he was defeated as an independent candidate. He ran against the official Labour candidate, Frank O'Flynn, and received some 3,700 votes at O'Flynn's expense, almost costing O'Flynn what had always been a Labour bastion.

In the 1981 election, the Social Credit Party invited him to stand for his old Island Bay electorate, but he declined.

References

Gerald O'Brien Wikipedia