Jamie Whyte is a New Zealand
classical-liberal academic and politician who was the Leader of
ACT New Zealand in 2014. He unsuccessfully contested the
Pakuranga electorate in the
2014 general election. At the election, Whyte held the first position on the party list, but ACT did not achieve enough party votes to secure any list seats.
[Act]
"Jamie Whyte"
, '' Act New Zealand'', 27 October 2005. Retrieved on 18 September 2014. Soon after the 2014 general election, he resigned from the leadership of ACT.
Whyte is a former philosophy lecturer, currency trader and management consultant. He has written books and newspaper columns about reasoning and politics.
Early life and academia
Whyte was born in
Auckland, New Zealand. He received his undergraduate degree from the
University of Auckland. He then moved to the UK to study for an M.Phil and Ph.D at
St John's College, Cambridge
St John's College is a Colleges of the University of Cambridge, constituent college of the University of Cambridge founded by the House of Tudor, Tudor matriarch Lady Margaret Beaufort. In constitutional terms, the college is a charitable corpo ...
.
Upon graduation, Whyte remained at Cambridge University for three years as a research fellow at
Corpus Christi College and temporarily lectured in the philosophy faculty and at the University of Reading. He won the ''Analysis'' journal prize for the best article by a philosopher under the age of 30.
Early career
Whyte then took up a job with the New York-based management consultancy firm
Oliver Wyman. He also worked as a foreign currency trader.
Writing and media
Since 2003, Whyte has written books for general audiences and newspaper columns, aiming to expose shoddy reasoning, especially by politicians. In 2006 he won the
Reason Foundation Bastiat Prize for journalism (jointly with Tim Harford of the ''
Financial Times'') and in 2010 he was named runner-up. In June 2014, Whyte won the
Institute of Economic Affairs' Arthur Seldon Memorial Award for Excellence for ''Quack Policy''.
He is the author of ''Crimes Against Logic'' (titled ''Bad Thoughts: A Guide to Clear Thinking'' in the UK; 2003), ''A Load of Blair'' (2005), ''Free Thoughts'' (2012) and ''Quack Policy'' (2013) and has also written columns for many notable publications, including ''
The Times'',
City A.M.,
Standpoint, ''Financial Times'' and ''
The Wall Street Journal''.
Whyte has also occasionally broadcast on
BBC Radio 4 and television.
Political career
In his youth, Whyte was a campaign volunteer for
Bob Jones'
New Zealand Party in the
1984 general election.
Despite no prior experience in political office, at a board meeting in February 2014, Whyte was elected to the ACT party's leadership, beating former MP,
John Boscawen. At the same meeting,
David Seymour
David Seymour may refer to:
* David Seymour (English politician) (died 1557/58), 14th-century Member of Parliament (MP) for Wareham and Great Bedwyn
*David Seymour (New Zealand politician) (born 1983), leader of the ACT Party
*David Seymour (photo ...
was chosen as ACT's candidate for the
Epsom electorate and Kenneth Wang was later elected as Whyte's deputy leader in April 2014.
In the 2014 general election, ACT only won enough votes to be represented by David Seymour in the
Epsom electorate. After the election, on 3 October 2014 Whyte resigned from the leadership of the party, saying: "Clearly, I make this announcement with regret, however the election result is clear, and I must now turn to my career and my family." He was replaced as ACT leader by David Seymour on the day of his resignation.
In February 2017, Whyte joined the
Institute of Economic Affairs as Director of Research. He left the think tank on 1 January 2019.
Whyte's political philosophy is
classical liberalism, in the tradition of
Friedrich Hayek.
[Hayek vs Keynes at the LSE (Cobden Centre), accessed June 2014.]
References
External links
ACT Party profile
{{DEFAULTSORT:Whyte, Jamie
Year of birth missing (living people)
Living people
New Zealand emigrants to the United Kingdom
New Zealand philosophers
Alumni of St John's College, Cambridge
Fellows of Corpus Christi College, Cambridge
Bastiat Prize winners
ACT New Zealand leaders
University of Auckland alumni
Unsuccessful candidates in the 2014 New Zealand general election
New Zealand Party politicians
Date of birth missing (living people)