Bernard James (Bernie) Ogilvy is a New Zealand educator and politician. He was a list member of Parliament (MP) for the United Future New Zealand party from 2002 to 2005. He left United Future with the breakaway Kiwi Party in 2007.
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Before entering national politics, Ogilvy lectured at Auckland's Masters Institute, a fundamentalist Christian teachers college,[1] as well as being involved with Youth With A Mission.
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Years | Term | Electorate | List | Party |
2002–2005 | 47th | List | 3 | United Future |
He was elected to the New Zealand Parliament as a list MP for the United Future party in the 2002 general election. Like his colleagues, Murray Smith, Paul Adams and Larry Baldock, Ogilvy was an evangelical or fundamentalist Christian. Like the above, and Marc Alexander, he lost his seat at the 2005 general election when the party's electoral support fell to one third its previous level.
Ogilvy reappeared as secretary of the new Kiwi Party in 2007, after Gordon Copeland seceded from United Future over Peter Dunne's support for Sue Bradford's child discipline bill, which sought to outlaw most forms of parental corporal punishment of children in New Zealand. Ogilvy made the application to register the Kiwi Party with the Electoral Commission.[2]
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