PM Transcripts

Transcripts from the Prime Ministers of Australia

Holt, Harold

Period of Service: 26/01/1966 - 19/12/1967
Release Date:
02/02/1967
Release Type:
Speech
Transcript ID:
1482
Document:
00001482.pdf 2 Page(s)
Released by:
  • Holt, Harold Edward
NEW ZEALAND TOUR 1967 - STATEMENT BY THE PRIME MINISTER, MR HAROLD HOLT, ON ARRIVAL AT WELLINGTON, NEW ZEALAND - 2ND FEBRUARY 1967

NEW ZEALAND TOUR 1967
STATEMENT BY THE PRIME MINISTER, MR. HAROLD
HOLT, ON ARRIVAL AT WELLINGTON, NEW ZEALAND 2ND FEBRUARY, 1967
Mr. Prime Minister, Ladies and Gentlemen:
I bring to you a very warm and friendly greeting to you,
Prime Minister, to your Government, and to the people of New Zealand
from the Government and people of Australia.
I am sure there is in my own country a strengthening
feeling that our two countries should be closer together in terms of
physical contact, in our policies, and in the mutual beneficial trade that can
develop between us, and as I made in my first year of office visits to our own
Forces abroad, I felt that my next priority, having got our Prime Ministers'
Conferen ce and the Manila Conference and matters of that sort, in which
both your Prime Minister and I were directly and personally involved, that
high on the list of priorities indeed, the first journey of the year in this
year after re-election should be a visit to New Zealand. I was delighted
to accept the invitation which my old friend, your Prime Minister, Keith
Holyoake, extended to me.
My wife has had the most fleeting contact only with New
Zealand. S" he was on a journey to America and had lunch in Auckland, I
think, some years ago. It is sixteen years since I was here, leading the
Australian delegation to the Commonwealth Parliamentary Conference at
Wellington.
( Mr. Holyoake: Too long.)
It is much too long, as you say, Keith. I think one of
the reasons why you have not seen more of Australian Prime Ministers is
that we do meet, and my predecessor did meet with you frequently, at the
Prime Ministers' Conferences abroad and at other g atherings of that sort,
but there is no substitute, if one wishes to understand a country and get to
know it, for the physical contact with the people and with the country. I
think I have learned more about New Zealand in the last seven days as I
tried to brief myself on what I might find here and on what we might discuss
here than I have learned in all the earlier years I have had in public life.
And there have been some very interecsting revelations for me coming from
that. I knew that we had won Davis Cups together. I did not realise that
the first time we ever won a Davis Cup was an Anzac combination, or
before there was an Anzac in those days in 1907, and I learned too
( Mr. Holyoake I will have to learn this, too)
Oh, yes, Norman Brookes and Wilding. They were a
very successful combination. I learned, too, that your cadets and this
is one reason why I would have been glad to see your guard of honour
your cadets have so frequently won the sword of honour at Duntroon. And
this year at the Officer Cadet School at Portsea where I have a seaside house,
my wife tells me that two New Zealanders were the two senior boys in that
particular year, one getting the sword of honour and the other the Queen's
Medal. So that we respect you not only as worthy friends but as worthy / 2

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competitors il ields of sport~ aiid other areas where we come into contact
one with the other.-I amDooking forward tremendously to this visit and learning
more about your beautiful country, having talks which will be of value I am
sure to us all, with your Prime Minister and Members of his Cabinet. And
I am quite sure that this visit will be fruitful for all the purposes that I
expect from it, and that with so much in common to serve, that our joint
interests can be assisted by interchanges of this kind.
My colleague, the Deputy Prime Minister, will be with you
quite shortly for the periodical discussions on trade matters, and I would
hope that my own visit is itself a symptom of a desire for much more
frequent exchanges at all levels of Government between our two countries.
MR. HOLYOAKE: I would just say briefly I am not going to make a speech
unfortunately the weather has upset the earlier arrangements but again
a very warm personal welcome, Harold, and I know you know we are so
close. You know New Zealanders very well, but it is grand you should
have this opportunity of meeting them and getting to know them on their own
ground. With those few words, I warmly re-echo our welcome.
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