Everything about Bruce Jesson totally explained
Bruce Jesson (
1944 -
1999) was a left wing
journalist, author and political figure in
New Zealand.
Early life
He was educated at
Christchurch Boys' High School (where he read
Darwin's
Origin of Species while a "lab boy" in the biology laboratory and became an atheist) and the
University of Canterbury, where he gained a Bachelor's degree in law. He worked briefly as a law clerk, but refused to swear allegiance to the Queen, and was never admitted to the Bar.
Political activism
As a student in the 1960s, he was initially attracted to the
Communist Party of New Zealand which tried to groom him to be the party's lawyer. The CPNZ had been the first communist party in the world to side with China in the
Sino-Soviet split. However, Jesson, being an independent thinker, soon struck out on his own, writing a number of polemics such as
Traitors to class and country: A study of the Conservative Left and publishing a journal called
Te Tao (The Spear). He had a lifelong antipathy to the
sectarianism and
dogmatism that plagued the small
Marxist groups in New Zealand. As a student he was involved in anti-Royalist activities, being associated with the burning of a New Zealand flag by another student during a visit by the
Queen Mother. He founded the Committee to Oppose Royal Tours (CORT).
Republicanism
Jesson was from his student days an avowed
republican championing an independent political and intellectual culture in New Zealand. He rebelled against the habit of the New Zealand Left to take its political cues from overseas countries. He founded the anti-royal
Republican Association in
1966, later moving to Auckland (first to
Pokeno, later
Otahuhu and finally
Mangere) and forming a political party (the original
Republican Party) to push the republic issue in
1967. Around 1970 he also associated briefly with Trotskyist radicals such as Owen Gager and David Bedggood, and he contributed occasionally to journals such as
Dispute,
New Zealand Monthly Review and
Spartacist Spasmodical.
When activity in the fledgling Republican Party petered out, Jesson wound up the party in
1974, but continued to publish a widely-read pro-republican broadsheet entitled
The Republican (1974-1995), covering both republican and leftwing issues in a plain and unpretentious style. This journal also featured articles by many other New Zealand leftists. (
The Republican merged into
Chris Trotter's
New Zealand Political Review in 1995). Jesson was a founding member of the
Republican Movement of Aotearoa New Zealand, until his death in 1999.
By this time, Jesson - who never had much of a steady career, working variously as labourer, wool presser, baker, dustman and freezing worker - was living with his wife Joce (Jocelyn née Brown), an educationist and tutor/lecturer, and worked as a househusband as well as pursuing his writing. He was interested in developing an indigenous Marxian tradition in New Zealand, and participated in the four NZ Marxian Political Economy conferences staged in the 1970s and early 1980s.
Maori Sovereignty
Around the time of the mass protests against the Springbok rugby tour of New Zealand in 1981, he associated with Māori radicals such as
Donna Awatere,
Dun Mihaka,
Syd Jackson and Ripeka Evans who sought to put
Māori nationalism on the political agenda (Mihaka, though an anti-royalist, was strictly speaking not a nationalist). The first drafts of Awatere's famous book
Maori Sovereignty were published in
The Republican.
Mainstream publications
It was only late in his life however that Jesson became better known to the general public, as respected political columnist for Auckland's
Metro magazine and contributor to other magazines such as
North & South and
New Zealand Political Review. He also published four books about the neo-liberal revolution in New Zealand, and became a fellow of the Auckland University Political Science Department.
Entering politics
In 1990, Jesson joined
Jim Anderton's Labour party splinter
NewLabour Party, and stood as a candidate for the party in the
New Lynn electorate. In 1991, he was elected to the
Auckland Regional Council as an
Alliance candidate, becoming chair of the Auckland Regional Services Trust between 1992 and 1995.
An anthology of his later articles has been published posthumously as
Bruce Jesson: To Build a Nation - Collected Writings 1975 - 1999 (2005). He is affectionately remembered as a very learned but unpretentious radical who sought to shed light on the peculiarities of New Zealand politics, and who pioneered an independent left wing analysis of local political affairs. The Bruce Jesson papers are archived at the University of Auckland Library. The Bruce Jesson Foundation was established in his honour.
Bibliography
- Traitors to class and country: A study of the Conservative Left
- The Fletcher Challenge: Wealth and Power in New Zealand (1980).
- Revival of the right: New Zealand politics in the 1980s
- Behind the mirror glass: The growth of wealth and power in New Zealand in the eighties (1987)
- Fragments of labour: The story behind the Labour government
- "The Disintegration of a Labour Tradition: New Zealand Politics in the 1980s", in: New Left Review, #192, March-April 1992.
- Only Their Purpose is Mad: The Money Men Take Over New Zealand (1999).
- Bruce Jesson: To Build a Nation - Collected Writings 1975-1999 (2005). Edited by Professor Andrew Sharp.
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