Less than a week after giving his maiden speech, Collins attended a fun run on lower Queen Street, Auckland, as part of a charity event for ChildFund.[3][4] He collapsed during the event and died at the scene.[5]
Personal life and family
Collins was born and raised in the South Auckland suburb of Ōtara.[6] He was the youngest of six children to bus driver and Pentecostal Church pastor Tauiliili Sio Collins and factory worker and cleaner Lotomau Collins.[7] His parents immigrated to New Zealand from Samoa in the 1960s, and were of mixed Samoan and Tokelauan descent.[8][9] The name Collins was selected before their migration in order to support their integration into New Zealand.[6] At primary school, Collins was also known as "Phillip" because of his teachers' unwillingness to learn how to say his given name.[6] As an adult, Collins bore the Samoan matai title of Faʻanānā from his mother's village of Satufia, Satupaitea, Savaiʻi.[10] He was brought up a Pentecostal Christian and later converted to Catholicism.[11][12] Tauiliili died in 2008, in his early sixties.[13] Collins had a brother, Thomas, who predeceased him.[14]
In childhood, Collins lived for several years with his mother's family in Savaiʻi where he attended Vaega Primary School. Returning to Auckland, he attended East Tamaki Primary School and Ferguson Intermediate School. He briefly attended Auckland Grammar School before moving to Tangaroa College.[6] He later studied education at the University of Auckland, graduating with a Bachelor of Arts in 1997 followed by a Master of Arts in 1999.[15] His MA dissertation included discussion of 'brown flight' .[16] He subsequently taught at the university and contributed to four published works.[17] He was elected Auckland University Students' Association president in 1999 and was the first Polynesian in that role. As president he represented students on the Auckland University Council.[18]
Collins' subsequent career included positions as a youth worker, a broadcaster, in the education sector and in the public service.[19] In 2010, he briefly hosted the weekend current affairs show Talanoa Pacific on the Pacific Media Network. He was stood down from his position after he questioned a lack of transparency in the process by which a private company called the Pacific Islands Economic Development Agency was given a $4.8 million Government grant.[20][21] After an investigation the grant was later cancelled.[22][23] He worked at the University of Auckland for fifteen years, running a Pacific student outreach programme.[24]
Collins married Fia, a diversity and inclusion specialist, in 2011. The couple had two daughters together.[25][11][14]
At the 2013 Auckland elections, Collins was elected to the Ōtara-Papatoetoe Local Board as a Labour Party candidate and became its chairperson.[26][27] An unsolicited original campaign song, which sampled the 2008 single "Somebody" by Devolo and compared Collins to Barack Obama, was created for Collins by two former members of a church youth group he had previously led.[28]
At the 2016 Auckland elections, Collins was elected to the Auckland Council, replacing Arthur Anae, who did not seek re-election.[31] He was sworn in as a councillor for the Manukau ward on 1 November 2016.[32] At Collins' inauguration, his family was turned away from the VIP seating area, which Collins said demonstrated systemic racism.[33] During his first term, he was deputy chair of the community development and safety committee. Collins won the council's support to lobby the government to ban the sale of fireworks to the public, citing safety concerns.[34][35]
In 2019 he was re-elected as the highest polling candidate in the Manakau Ward.[36] In his second term, he led the council's work on homelessness.[37] Collins supported the council's goal that homelessness should be rare, brief and non-recurring. He also held the view that homelessness and anti-social public behaviour were distinct issues that should not be conflated.[38]
On 27 August 2021, during the COVID-19 pandemic in New Zealand, Collins called for the New Zealand Government to grant an amnesty to people who had overstayed their visas in order to encourage members of the Pasifika community to come forward for COVID-19 tests. The then Health MinisterChris Hipkins had earlier reassured the Pasifika community that the Government would not use any information collected during testing for immigration purposes.[39]
On 25 July 2021, Collins disclosed that he and his family had received a death threat on 19 June in response to his comments criticising TVNZ's Police Ten 7 programme for its negative depiction of the Māori and Pasifika communities. Despite the threats to him and his family, and the 'deep sense of guilt' he felt for exposing his family to the threat, Collins and his wife resolved to continue his involvement in politics and he later said this was the moment he decided to run for the Auckland mayoralty.[9][40]
Collins was regarded as the main centre-left mayoral candidate compared to an initially crowded field with three main centre-right candidates.[46] In public opinion polling conducted from July through early September, he led eight other declared candidates but only saw a peak of 29% support. After Leo Molloy and Viv Beck withdrew, endorsing Wayne Brown, Collins' lead dissipated in two mid-September polls.[47][45] In the October election, Collins received 124,802 votes (30.85%), compared to 181,810 votes for Brown, who was elected mayor. Collins attributed his election defeat to alleged "unconscious bias" among voters and the postal ballot system which disadvantaged lower-income voters.[48]
Following the 2022 Auckland mayoral election, Collins announced that he would retire from local body politics. When asked on election night, he stated he had no intention to run for Parliament at the 2023 New Zealand general election[49] but in November it was reported that he was considering opportunities with the Labour Party and the Green Party.[50]
Collins was reported as a likely candidate for the Green Party in January 2023.[51] In February 2023, Collins announced he was seeking selection as the Green candidate for Panmure-Ōtāhuhu and a place on the party list.[11] The draft Green Party list released on 3 April featured Collins in 12th place.[52] The finalised party list was released on 20 May 2023, featuring Collins up one place to 11th while also confirming him as the Green Party candidate for Panmure-Ōtāhuhu.[2]
In mid-September 2023, Collins received a death threat during the 2023 election campaign. The Green Party referred the threat to the Police, who subsequently identified a 58-year-old man as the perpetrator. The man admitted fault and completed a Te Pae Oranga restorative justice process involving Police and Māoriiwi (tribal) partners.[53]
Collins came third in the Panmure-Ōtāhuhu electorate with 4,312 votes.[54] However, he was elected to Parliament via the Green party list.[55] Collins sat on the governance and administration committee and was appointed the Green Party spokesperson for ACC, commerce and consumer affairs, local government, Pacific Peoples, seniors, sport and recreation, Treaty of Waitangi negotiations, and veterans.[56][57]
Collins delivered his maiden speech on 15 February 2024. In the speech, he addressed the theme of inequality and set out his perspectives that poverty is the driver of most societal challenges and the greatest challenge facing his generation is climate change. He criticised what he described as neoliberal economics' "farcical" creation of unemployment to stem inflation "when domestic inflation in New Zealand has been driven by big corporates making excessive profits." He also said he hoped his time in Parliament would inspire "the square pegs, the misfits, the forgotten, the unloved, the invisible."[58]
Collins spoke in Parliament on only three other occasions, opposing the re-introduction of 90-day trials in most workplaces, speaking in support of a social worker registration scheme, and asking a question about the government's proposed Treaty Principles Bill.[59][60][61] He died while in office, on 21 February 2024.[62]
Political views
Collins was historically aligned with the Labour Party, but veered from the party line on a number of occasions, such as opposing the Regional Fuel Tax on equity grounds, and being a vocal supporter of the 2019 Ihumātao protest.[63][64]
His politics were generally centre-left,[50] but he had held some conservative positions previously. He said these stemmed from his strict, Pentecostal religious upbringing.[9][11] He was opposed to the Marriage (Definition of Marriage) Amendment Act 2013, which legalised same-sex marriage in New Zealand, but later apologised for his actions.[65][11] Collins' niece came out as transgender in 2013, influencing him to move away from these views, despite some family members not supporting her transition. He later described himself as having abandoned the Christian theological position of "love the sinner, hate the sin."[11]
On abortion, Collins said in 2022: "I won't get in the way of women and people who are pregnant making their own, deeply personal decisions. I too am on a journey of understanding and empathy and always open to listening to people's diverse experiences and beliefs."[9]
On 21 February 2024, Collins took part in a fun run in and around Commercial Bay and lower Queen Street, Auckland, as part of an event for charity ChildFund.[67][4] ChildFund New Zealand chief executive Josie Pagani was a friend of Collins and had asked him to participate. Other participants included former professional boxer and fellow Samoan community advocate David Letele.[68] The event, which involved running while carrying buckets of water, started at 8:00am in Te Komititanga Square.[69] According to Letele, the 49-year-old Collins appeared fit and healthy, and was laughing and joking throughout the race.[68]
After the race, Collins collapsed outside Britomart Station, shortly before 9:30am.[70] Letele and a few others quickly noticed he was not breathing.[68] Onsite paramedics rushed to Collins' aid, joined by firefighters and off-duty police officers. The area was cordoned off, and a black tent placed over the site.[71] They worked to resuscitate Collins with defibrillators for 30 to 40 minutes.[68] Despite their efforts, Collins was pronounced dead at roughly 10:00am.[72][71] Letele led race participants in prayers and waiata at the site.[73][68]
Tributes
Less than an hour after Collins collapsed Green Party co-leader James Shaw expressed the caucus's "profound shock and sadness".[74] Shaw continued that despite his long service in Auckland local government "in many ways Efeso's political career was only just beginning. He was such an authentic, genuine, warm man who had respect for everyone."[74] Labour Party deputy leader Carmel Sepuloni said that while he had left "[Labour's] fale and moved into the Greens', he was only next door."
The House of Representatives then adjourned until 27 February.[77] New Zealand flags on government buildings were flown at half-mast two days later to mark Collins' funeral.[78] Collins was the first New Zealand MP to die in office since Labour MP Parekura Horomia, eleven years earlier.[79]
A second memorial debate acknowledging Collins' death was held in Parliament on 30 April 2024.[83][84]
Footnotes
^Normally, list MPs do not have individual predecessors or successors, but Collins died during a sitting parliament and therefore was succeeded by Xu-Nan.
^Most mayoral candidates in New Zealand officially run as independents