Kevin Hague


Kevin Grant Hague has been the chief executive of Forest & Bird, an independent New Zealand conservation organisation, since October 2016. He is also a former New Zealand member of parliament representing the Green Party who was first elected to parliament in 2008.
Hague was the Green Party spokesperson for Health, conservation, and Rainbow Issues.
Prior to his election to Parliament, Hague was the Chief Executive of the West Coast District Health Board. Hague is also an author, a long time gay rights activist and a former executive director of the New Zealand AIDS Foundation.

Career and activism

Hague has been an activist for a number of causes. In the 1980s he was heavily involved in the campaign against sporting contacts with apartheid South Africa. In 1989 he co-authored ' Hague also edited Terry Stewart's 1996 book '.
Hague is openly gay and in 1988 began work as a research officer for the New Zealand AIDS Foundation, which provides education on HIV/AIDS issues and advocacy and support for those with HIV and AIDS. From 1998 to 2003 he was the Foundation's executive director.
He has represented New Zealand at United Nations, UNESCO and Commonwealth conferences on apartheid and on AIDS. He has also campaigned on behalf of cycling.
In 2005 Hague became Chief Executive of the West Coast District Health Board, where he had worked since 2003. Hague resigned in December 2008 to become a Member of Parliament.

Member of Parliament

Hague was placed at number seven on the Green Party list for the 2008 election. He was elected as a Green Party MP and gained the third highest number of candidate votes in the West Coast-Tasman electorate.
Hague was a member of the select committee looking at Labour MP Louisa Wall's Marriage Amendment Bill. The bill, which passed its first reading 80–40, was approved by the committee.
Hague said once the bill had passed its third reading, in April 2013, there would be a number of "incredibly emotional" weddings between gay couples.
Hague announced on 5 September 2016 that he would resign from parliament to become the CEO of Forest and Bird. He was replaced by Barry Coates.

Personal life

Hague was born in Aldershot, Hampshire, in the United Kingdom but moved to New Zealand in 1973 when he was 13 years old. Hague enjoys mountain biking, cycle touring and tramping. He has been with his partner since 1984, but has no plans to get married since Labour MP Louisa Wall's Marriage Amendment Bill passed.