Dail Jones

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Template:Short description Template:Use dmy dates Template:Use New Zealand English Template:Infobox officeholder Dail Michael John Jones Template:Post-nominals (born 7 July 1944) is a New Zealand politician. He has been a member of the New Zealand First party, and was formerly in the National Party.

Early life

Jones was born in Karachi, British India, and attended St Joseph's College Quetta and Garrison School, Quetta and Karachi Grammar School.Template:Sfn He and his mother arrived in New Zealand in 1960, and he completed his education at St Paul's College, Auckland, and the University of Auckland, from where he earned an LLB. He began practice as a lawyer.Template:Sfn

Member of Parliament

Template:NZ parlbox header Template:NZ parlbox Template:NZ parlbox Template:NZ parlbox Template:NZ parlbox break Template:NZ parlbox Template:NZ parlbox break Template:NZ parlbox Template:NZ parlbox footer In the Template:NZ election link, Jones was elected MP for Waitemata, standing as a National Party candidate. As such Dail Jones was the first person from Pakistan to become a New Zealand Member of Parliament. In the following election, the Waitemata seat was abolished, and Jones was elected as the MP for Helensville. He retained this electorate until the 1984 election, when Helensville electorate was abolished.Template:Sfn Jones contested the new Template:NZ electorate link electorate, but was defeated by the Labour Party candidate, Jack Elder.Template:Sfn

Jones was Junior Whip for National in 1979.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn From April 1982 to June 1984, Jones was Deputy Chairman of Committees.Template:Sfn

Jones is known as one of the few New Zealand MPs to have been injured in a politically motivated attack; in 1980, while serving as a National Party MP, he was stabbed in the chest by an elderly constituent in his electorate office leaving him with a punctured lung.Template:Sfn The assailant, Ambrose Tindall, was obsessed about a traffic ticket totaling $15.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

New Zealand First

Considerably later, in the Template:NZ election link, Jones returned to Parliament as a list MP for the New Zealand First party, which had been established during Jones' time outside Parliament. He was ranked in tenth place on the New Zealand First list. He was New Zealand First spokesperson on foreign affairs, trade, customs, the courts, and the attorney-general's role. He lost his seat in the Template:NZ election link, when he was again tenth on the party list (the lowest list MP elected in 2005 was Pita Paraone, who was ranked seventh). He was elected President of New Zealand First when Doug Woolerton resigned.

More recently, there have been frictions between Jones, Doug Woolerton and New Zealand First social liberal Brian Donnelly over the repeal of Section 59 of the Crimes Act 1961, legislation that allowed the use of parental corporal punishment against children (or spanking).<ref>[1] (broken link to Stuff)</ref>

Dail Jones stated that "custard is more dangerous than second-hand smoke. ...[and] milk ... is worse than second-hand smoke".<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref>

He also attracted criticism in February 2008 from Winston Peters for suggesting that New Zealand First had received large anonymous donations.

On 15 February 2008, Jones was returned to Parliament as a list MP once more, replacing Brian Donnelly, who had been appointed as New Zealand's High Commissioner to the Cook Islands.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> He was tenth on the New Zealand First party list in Template:NZ election link year. Two people ahead of him on the party list, Susan Baragwanath and Jim Peters, declined the position, and he resigned as party President after becoming an MP.

In March 2008, he was critical<ref name="NZ_Herald_10501907">Template:Cite web</ref> of fellow NZ First MP Peter Brown's views on Asian immigration.

In the Template:NZ election link, Jones was 14th on the New Zealand First party list, but the party lost all its parliamentary seats, winning no electorates and polling below the 5% threshold. He left politics after this election.

Honours

In the 2006 New Year Honours, Jones was appointed a Companion of the Queen's Service Order, for public services.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

Notes

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References

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Works cited

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