(1947-10-09) 9 October 1947 (age 77) Auckland, New Zealand
Spouse
Leonie Tisch
William Lindsay TischQSOJP (born 9 October 1947), known as Lindsay Tisch, is a former New Zealand National Party politician.
Early life
Tisch was born in Auckland, New Zealand, in 1947. When he was a child, his family moved to Matamata.[1] He obtained a diploma in agriculture from Lincoln College.[2] He has worked as a farmer and a rural valuer, and was a management consultant. He was a director of Landcorp (1991–1997) and is a member of the Institute of Directors in New Zealand and the New Zealand Institute of Property Management.[2]
He joined the National Party in 1966, and has held a number of senior roles in its organisational wing. In 1994 he served briefly as the party's president and was the party's campaign manager for the 1996 election.[2] He was a member of Parliament from 1999 to 2017, when he retired.[3]
Tisch was selected to replace John Luxton as National's candidate in the electorate of Karapiro in the 1999 election. He defeated the Labour candidate by 5,000 votes. The name of the electorate was changed back to Piako for the 2002 election and the 2005 election; Tisch was comfortably re-elected each time. The name referred to a little-known river past Morrinsville, and Tisch was successful in lobbying to have the electorate renamed after the Waikato River.[1]
In 2009, it was revealed Tisch was using a front company to maximise his accommodation allowance paid by the taxpayer. Tisch was claiming $410 a week which was paid to his property investment company, Heritage 653 Limited.[4]
Tisch was never a minister but held senior parliamentary roles in the National Party and in the House of Representatives. He was the National Party junior whip (2002–2005) and senior whip (2005–2006) before taking on roles as Deputy Speaker of the House (2008–2011) and Assistant Speaker of the House (2011–2017). Under former leaders Bill English and Don Brash, Tisch was briefly National Party spokesperson for small business (2002–2005), civil defence and emergency services (2003–2004), and internal affairs (2003–2005).[5]
Political views
Tisch held conservative views and opposed same-sex marriage law reform. In 2004, Tisch voted against the Civil Union Act 2004, a bill making it legal for those in same-sex as well as heterosexual relationships to enter into a civil-union.[6] In 2005, Tisch voted for Gordon Copeland's Marriage (Gender Clarification) Amendment Bill, a bill which would have amended the Marriage Act to define marriage as only between a man and woman.[7] In 2012 and 2013, Tisch voted against the Marriage (Definition of Marriage) Amendment Bill, a bill allowing same-sex couples to marry in New Zealand.[8]