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Sir Basil Arthur, 5th Baronet

The Honourable
Sir Basil Arthur
Sir Basil Arthur.jpg
20th Speaker of the House of Representatives
In office
1984–1985
Prime Minister David Lange
Preceded by Richard Harrison
Succeeded by Gerard Wall
Member of the New Zealand Parliament
for Timaru
In office
1962–1985
Preceded by Clyde Carr
Succeeded by Maurice McTigue
Personal details
Born 18 September 1928
Timaru, New Zealand
Died 1 May 1985(1985-05-01) (aged 56)
Nationality New Zealand
Political party Labour
Signature

Sir Basil Malcolm Arthur, 5th Baronet (18 September 1928 – 1 May 1985) served as Speaker of the New Zealand House of Representatives from 1984 to 1985. He was a member of the Labour Party.

Arthur was born in Timaru, New Zealand. His father, a hotel proprietor, inherited the title of 4th Baronet in 1941, and Arthur in turn inherited it on his father's death in 1949. However, he showed a preference for labouring jobs, and made little of his title.

In 1960 Arthur stood for Labour in the Hamilton electorate, coming second.

In 1962, he contested two by-elections for the Labour Party: first, unsuccessfully, in Waitaki; then, successfully, in Timaru. On entering Parliament at age 33 he was the country's youngest MP. He was reluctant to be called "Sir", but the Speaker at the time, Ronald Algie, said that refusing this honorific would be disrespectful to the Queen.

Arthur was Minister of Transport and Minister in Charge of the State Insurance Office from 1972 until 1975.

When Labour won the 1984 election, Arthur became Speaker of the New Zealand House of Representatives. He served in that capacity for one year, before dying in office after a short illness. The then Prime Minister, David Lange recalled in My Life (2005) that Arthur was gravely ill in Wellington Hospital, and if he resigned from the member's superannuation scheme before he died (but not otherwise) his estate would get a lump-sum payment. He had to answer a question in the house, then went to hospital with a letter of resignation "only to find that he had died hardly a minute before I got there". Labour lost the subsequent Timaru by-election, with a candidate that did not suit "the conservative character of the electorate."


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