Anne Tolley

Anne Tolley
Tolley in 2019
Commission Chair of the Tauranga City Council
Assumed office
9 February 2021
Preceded byTenby Powell (as Mayor)
Deputy Speaker of the New Zealand House of Representatives
In office
8 November 2017 – 17 October 2020
Preceded byChester Borrows
Succeeded byAdrian Rurawhe
26th Minister of Social Development
In office
13 October 2014 – 26 October 2017
Prime MinisterJohn Key
Bill English
Preceded byPaula Bennett
Succeeded byCarmel Sepuloni
44th Minister of Education
In office
19 November 2008 – 25 November 2011
Prime MinisterJohn Key
Preceded byChris Carter
Succeeded byHekia Parata
Minister for Tertiary Education
In office
19 November 2008 – 27 January 2010[1]
Prime MinisterJohn Key
Preceded byPete Hodgson
Succeeded bySteven Joyce
Member of the New Zealand Parliament
for East Coast
In office
17 September 2005 – 17 October 2020
Preceded byJanet Mackey
Succeeded byKiri Allan
Majority6,413
Member of the New Zealand Parliament
for National Party list
In office
27 November 1999 – 27 July 2002
Personal details
Born
Anne Merrilyn Hicks

(1953-03-01) 1 March 1953 (age 71)
Wellington, New Zealand
Political partyNational Party
Spouse
Allan Hunt Tolley
(m. 1973)
ChildrenThree
OccupationHotelier, Local Government
Websiteannetolley.co.nz

Anne Merrilyn Tolley JP (née Hicks; born 1 March 1953) is a New Zealand politician.

Tolley was elected as a member of the Napier City Council in 1986 and served as deputy mayor from 1989 until 1995. In 1999 she was elected to Parliament as a list MP representing the National Party. She was unseated in 2002 but returned in 2005 as the new East Coast MP. Between 2008 and 2017 she was a senior minister in the Fifth National Government, holding the offices of Minister of Education, Minister of Social Development, Minister of Corrections, Minister of Police and Minister of Local Government. She established Oranga Tamariki and was the first Minister for Children from 2016 to 2017.

She was Deputy Speaker of the House of Representatives from 2017 to 2020. In 2021 she was appointed Chair of the Commission overseeing the Tauranga City Council.[2]

  1. ^ "John Key announces Cabinet reshuffle". The New Zealand Herald. 26 January 2010. Retrieved 26 January 2010.
  2. ^ "Commissioners appointed to Tauranga City Council". 2 February 2021. Retrieved 14 April 2022.

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