Mary Batchelor


Mary Dorothy Batchelor was a New Zealand trade unionist, feminist and Labour Party politician.

Biography

Early life and career

Batchelor was born in Christchurch in 1927, the elder of two daughters, to parents from the West Coast. She attended St Mary's College until she left at 13 to begin work. She began training as a hat maker, but depreciating eyesight forced her to leave the trade. She married young to Arthur Batchelor and had two children. When her children reached school age, she returned to work. Initially she worked in retail later as a sewing machine demonstrator and then manager of a grocery store. After divorcing her husband, her subsequent experiences as a solo working mother strengthened her motivation to further women's rights and employment opportunities which led her to become active politically.
In 1964 she became an organiser for the 5000 member strong Canterbury Clerical Workers' Union. She was later elected both president of the Canterbury branch of the Council for Equal Pay and Opportunity and appointed a delegate to the Canterbury Trades Council and the National Council of Women.

Political career

In the 1960s she was living in St Albans and was an officeholder in the local branch of the Labour Party and was a member of its electorate committee. She worked as a campaign manager for Roger Drayton, Labour's successful candidate in.
Batchelor was then elected a member of the Christchurch City Council in 1971. She was appointed chairperson of the council's health and general committee in her first term. She was re-elected three years later but in 1977 decided not to seek another term. She also served as Member of Parliament for the Avon electorate in Christchurch for 15 years from 1972 to 1987. She was New Zealand's twelfth female MP. During the Third Labour Government she clashed with socially conservative Prime Minister Norman Kirk over abortion and homosexual law reform, both of which he opposed. She became known as a champion of the underdog, but later said she did not push feminist issues too strongly to avoid alienating others. "She advocated firmly for equality of women in work, and for women generally, without being anti-male".
After Labour was defeated in 1975 Batchelor became Labour's spokesperson on women's affairs. Despite clashing with National Prime Minister Robert Muldoon in the house several times, the two got on well with each other. She notably became a victim of Muldoon's routine name-calling. He referred to her as "" after she dyed her hair a startling shade of red, one of the few times she achieved any semblance of prominence in her parliamentary career.
Dissatisfaction with her low-profile performance in Parliament was beginning to show by the 1980s. In the lead up to the election she narrowly survived an electorate committee vote of no confidence and a challenge from local union leader Paul Piesse and automotive surveyor David John Penny for the Labour Party nomination in Avon. The battle went to a second vote before Batchelor finally emerged victorious. She was re-elected that year, which saw the formation of the Fourth Labour Government. Despite having served in Parliament since 1972, and therefore one of Labour's most experienced MPs, she was overlooked for a place in Cabinet after the government was formed. The challenge against her for the nomination, combined with her Cabinet snub lead her to announce her retirement at the election.

Later life and death

After Parliament, Batchelor owned a second house on Australia's Gold Coast, so that she could avoid the Christchurch winters and be near her daughter and granddaughter. She took up painting and was a member of the Royal Queensland Art Society.
Batchelor died on 12 March 2009 aged 82. She was survived by her son Gary, daughter Marilyn and multiple grandchildren and great-grandchildren.

Awards

She was appointed a Companion of the Queen's Service Order for public services in the 1987 Queen's Birthday Honours. She was awarded the Queen Elizabeth II Silver Jubilee Medal in 1977, the New Zealand 1990 Commemoration Medal, and, in 1993, the New Zealand Suffrage Centennial Medal.