About Marcus Ganley

Since the late 1990s I have worked at the intersection of government, politics and business.

From 1996 to 1998 I was Commonwealth Scholar from Australia to New Zealand funded by the Commonwealth Scholarship and Fellowship Plan at the University of Auckland. While at Auckland University I completed an Master of Arts (First Class Honours) in political studies. My thesis "Three's a crowd" : an examination of the bases of electoral support for two established parties and a new party contesting the centre of the New Zealand electorate utilised data from the New Zealand Election Study to understand electoral competition in New Zealand’s first election under the Mixed-Member Proportional (MMP) electoral system.

During this time I also wrote a chapter on the election in the Waipareira electorate at the same 1996 election published as “Waipareira: A Four-Way Fight” in From Campaign to Coalition: The 1996 MMP Election edited by Jonathon Boston, Stephen Levine, Elizabeth McLeay and Nigel Roberts.

As part of this work I also wrote an opinion piece for the New Zealand Herald: Henare and co probably best to stay with party

While my MA thesis focused on electoral politics, I subsequently became interested in institutional politics, particularly the interface between legislative and executive power in parliamentary democracies.

While working as a doctoral scholar at University of Auckland I became interested in the reforms made to the New Zealand Parliament’s Standing Orders in the lead up to electoral system change in 1996.

I presented a paper on this topic to the Australasian Political Studies Association annual conference in Christchurch: What the Australian Senate can House of Representatives.

I was subsequently awarded the Winthrop Doctoral Scholarship to the University of Western Australia to complete a PhD on the topic.

While I never completed the PhD I did present a number of papers drawn from it including:

Public Perceptions of the New Zealand Parliament at the Australasian Study of Parliament Group 1999 National Conference at the New South Wales Parliament. This was subsequently published in volume 14 of Legislative Studies (now rebranded as the Australasian Parliamentary Review) and republished in the NZ Parliament and Business Trust Information Bulletin 2000 edition 3.

Do New Zealand Select Committees make a difference? at the Australasian Study of Parliament Group 2000 National Conference at the Queensland Parliament.

Select committees and their role in keeping Parliament relevant: do New Zealand select committees make a difference?

Paper presented to the Australasian Study of Parliament Group National Conference: 14-16 July 2000 Customs House and Queensland Parliament Brisbane, Qld, Australia

The role of New Zealand Parliament in the Treaty of Waitangi settlement process

In this paper presented to the Australasian Political Studies Association Annual Conference, 24 September 2001, Parliament House, Brisbane I analyse the role of New Zealand Parliament and its select committee system in the Treaty of Waitangi settlement process.

While undertaking this research I worked as a Select Committee Clerk in the New Zealand Parliament’s Office of the Clerk of the House of Representatives.

I also completed a Bachelor of Laws (First Class Honours) at Victoria University of Wellington. I started my law degree at the University of Queensland in 1993.

I then went on to work as a Senior Adviser to Prime Minister Helen Clark and then to Deputy Prime Minister Michael Cullen.

Following the defeat of the Clark Government in 2008, I worked as Director of Policy for Hon Phil Goff, Leader of the Opposition. I also ran for Wellington City Council in the Lambton Ward in 2010. Despite the Sunday Star-Times saying I was successful, I was not.

In 2011 and 2012 I worked on the establishment of Australia’s Parliamentary Budget Office. In this article Marcus Ganley: Green Party's policy costing unit idea is sensible published in the New Zealand Herald I explored whether such a model should be introduced in New Zealand.

Charlton Brown years

From 2013 until 2016 I worked for award winning Brisbane-based training company Charlton Brown. I was a member of the company board, company secretary and worked as Executive Director, Legal and Corporate Affairs.

Scholarships and Academic Prizes

Legal Research Foundation Student Paper Award 2003

Electoral Commission 2003 Wallace Award for best paper by a tertiary student

University of Western Australia

  • Winthrop Doctoral Scholarship 1999

  • Australian Postgraduate Award 1999

University of Auckland Doctoral Scholarship, 1998

Commonwealth Scholarship and Fellowship Plan, Scholarship from Australia to New Zealand, 1996 and 1997

Institute for Public Administration Australia (Queensland) student prize, 1995

University of Queensland

  • Best Individual Mooter, Law Faculty Moot Competition, 1995

  • Alan Robb Memorial Prize for Equity and Trusts, 1995

Australia’s section 44 debate

In 2017 I became the focus of some media commentary relating to the revelation that then Australian Deputy Prime Minister, Barnaby Joyce, was ineligible to sit in the Australian Parliament due to holding dual citizenship.

Some of the media coverage is set out below: