Geoffrey Palmer
- In full:
- Sir Geoffrey Winston Russell Palmer
- Born:
- April 21, 1942, Nelson, New Zealand (age 82)
- Also Known As:
- Sir Geoffrey Winston Russell Palmer
- Title / Office:
- prime minister (1989-1990), New Zealand
- Political Affiliation:
- New Zealand Labour Party
Geoffrey Palmer (born April 21, 1942, Nelson, New Zealand) is a New Zealand lawyer, educator, and politician who served as New Zealand Labour Party leader and prime minister of New Zealand in 1989–90.
Palmer was educated at Victoria University of Wellington (B.A., LL.B.) and in the U.S., at the University of Chicago. He worked as a solicitor for a Wellington law firm (1964–66) before turning to teaching, becoming a lecturer in political science at Victoria University of Wellington (1968–69), professor of law at the Universities of Iowa and Virginia (1969–73), and professor of English and New Zealand law at Victoria again (1974–79). After joining the New Zealand Labour Party in 1975, he was elected to Parliament in a by-election in 1979. He became the personal assistant to Prime Minister Wallace Edward Rowling and soon was deputy leader of the party (1983–89) and deputy prime minister and minister of justice and attorney general (1984–89).
When Prime Minister David Russell Lange, suffering serious setbacks in party loyalties and public opinion, resigned in August 1989, he nominated Palmer as his successor, and party leaders confirmed the choice. One year later, in September 1990, Palmer resigned for virtually the same reasons.
Palmer subsequently taught law at Victoria University and the University of Iowa, and in 1994 he cofounded a law firm. In 2005–10 he served as president of New Zealand’s Law Commission, a government-funded organization that reviewed areas of laws and then made recommendations for changes to Parliament. Palmer supported a written constitution for New Zealand, and he wrote (with Andrew S. Butler) the books A Constitution for Aotearoa New Zealand (2016) and Towards Democratic Renewal: Ideas for Constitutional Change in New Zealand (2018). He published numerous other works, including Reform: A Memoir (2013). Palmer was knighted in 1991.