(1956-12-16) 16 December 1956 (age 67) Oxford, New Zealand
Political party
ACT New Zealand
Spouse
Louise Crome
Children
4
Occupation
Economist
Rodney Philip HideQSO (born 16 December 1956) is a former New Zealand politician of the ACT New Zealand party. Hide was a Member of Parliament for ACT from 1996 until 2011, was ACT's leader between 2004 and 2011, and represented the Epsom constituency from 2005 to 2011. In the Fifth National Government, Hide was Minister of Local Government, Associate Minister of Commerce and Minister of Regulatory Reform until 2011.[1]
He stepped down as ACT leader in April 2011 after a leadership challenge from Don Brash and retired from Parliament at the general election later that year.[2]
^Kay, Martin (17 November 2008). "New groups part of deals". The Dominion Post.[permanent dead link]
^Satherley, Dan (27 April 2011). "Rodney Hide resigns, makes way for Brash". 3 News. Archived from the original on 1 October 2012. Retrieved 28 April 2011.
Rodney Philip Hide QSO (born 16 December 1956) is a former New Zealand politician of the ACT New Zealand party. Hide was a Member of Parliament for ACT...
Under Prebble's leadership the party held nine seats in Parliament. RodneyHide served as leader from 2004 to 2011. ACT was briefly led by former National...
for Freedom (VFF). Notable hosts have included former ACT Party leader RodneyHide, former TVNZ broadcaster Peter Williams and anti-vaccine influencer Chantelle...
a local and regional council. However, this was rejected by Minister RodneyHide. The district was bounded in the north by the start of the Auckland metropolitan...
2011, Brash joined ACT (a libertarian party) as its leader, replacing RodneyHide. He resigned as leader on the night of the 2011 general election in November...
been handled, saying it had been "appalling". Former ACT Party leader, RodneyHide, said "The warring sides have packed it in, without a winner or a loser...
November 2016. "Govt papers reveal another Rodney plan". The New Zealand Herald. 28 September 2009. "RodneyHide: Local boards will engage like never before"...
Amendments included renaming the council to "Auckland Katchafire Council" or "RodneyHide Memorial Council" and replacing the phrase "powers of a regional council"...
Similarly, the electoral fortunes of the ACT Party depended very largely on RodneyHide retaining Epsom, which he did. Amongst other parties very aware of the...
Labour candidate took second place in all the general electorates except Rodney, where it was Conservative Party leader Colin Craig. In eleven electorates...
leader of ACT in the 2002 election. Prebble was replaced as ACT leader by RodneyHide in 2004, and did not stand in the 2005 election.[citation needed] Prebble's...
Presenter TV series 2007 The Tattooist Crash Film 2007 We're Here To Help RodneyHide Film 2007 The Last Magic Show Trevor Norton Film 2007 The Map Reader...
2008 Prime Minister Helen Clark Preceded by Mark Burton Succeeded by RodneyHide 44th Minister for Māori Development In office 26 October 2017 – 6 November...
electorate seat in the 2005 election to the ACT New Zealand leader RodneyHide. Hide had put out a tactical voting message calling on National voters to...
Bridges National 2 May 2017 26 October 2017 Minister of Local Government RodneyHide ACT 19 November 2008 14 December 2011 Nick Smith National 14 December...
support, was reported as leading unsuccessful moves to remove Epsom MP RodneyHide as ACT leader in November 2009. At the ACT party conference in March...
National-led government. In Key's first Cabinet he gave the ACT Party's RodneyHide and Heather Roy ministerial portfolios outside Cabinet, and the Māori...
attention, with negative commentary from former government minister RodneyHide and the Sensible Sentencing Trust, and support from TV host and self-declared...
contender in the leadership race, RodneyHide, had a reputation for advocating the style that Douglas condemned. Hide won the leadership and headed ACT...
Nicky Wagner Jacqui Dean David Bennett Tim Macindoe Scott Simpson ACT RodneyHide Heather Roy John Boscawen John Banks United Future Peter Dunne Māori...