Maharey was born in Palmerston North in 1953, the son of William Maharey and his wife Irene. He attended Freyberg High School in 1966–1969. After gaining an MA Hons in sociology from Palmerston North's Massey University (1972–1976),[2] he was a lecturer at that institution from 1978, teaching both sociology and business administration. His particular specialties within sociology were social change and cultural studies.[3]
Maharey immediately became Labour's spokesperson for broadcasting and communications under Mike Moore.[5] He later gained associate responsibility for education. In 1993, he instead became spokesperson for labour and employment.[6] In 1994 he was promoted to a seat on the frontbench to replace Peter Dunne, who had quit the party.[7] In a 1997 reshuffle he relinquished the labour portfolio and instead became spokesperson on social welfare.[8]
While former colleague John Tamihere described Maharey as 'smarmy' in an Investigate magazine interview, Maharey's personality publicly surfaced during the Christine Rankin Employment Court Hearing in 2001, where Rankin (a former head of Maharey's department whose contract was not renewed) and Maharey publicly exchanged insults.[11]The New Zealand Herald quoted several exchanges between the two verbatim that were alleged to have occurred by Rankin.[12] The court did not uphold Rankin's claims.
In April 2007, Maharey came under criticism for saying 'fuck you' in parliamentary question time on 4 April.[13] He apologised shortly afterwards. The outburst was elicited when Maharey was questioned by Jonathan Coleman about the appropriateness of his actions as broadcasting minister threatening to complain to the Radio New Zealand board when he was displeased by a host Sean Plunket referring to a comment Maharey had made about the need for the Cambridge exam in Botswana as 'racist.'[14]
From 2008 until 2016, Steve Maharey was the Vice-Chancellor of Massey University. During Maharey's eight years as Vice-Chancellor, total staff numbers (FTE) increased from 3,080 in 2009, his first full year as Vice-Chancellor, to 3,213 in 2016, his last year in the role.[17] However, over the same time period academic staff numbers remained much the same. Student numbers (EFTS) decreased from 19,994 in 2009 to 18,994 in 2016 due to a reduction in domestic students, including extramural students, partly offset by an increase in international students.[17] Māori enrolments also decreased from 3,548 to 3338 students during this period.[17] Over the same period, the university's consolidated revenues increased from $406 million to $489 million and net assets increased from $924 million to approximately $1 billion.[17] However, external research income decreased from $70 million in 2009 to $67 million in 2016.[17]
In 2022, Maharey was awarded an honorary Doctor of Literature degree by Massey University.[18]
Pharmac & ACC
In August 2018, Maharey became the chair of the Board of Pharmac.[19] During this period Pharmac underwent a period of change following a critical review.[20] In April 2021, he became Chair of the Accident Compensation Corporation (ACC).[21]
In March 2023, Maharey attracted media attention after the Public Service Commissioner Peter Hughes ruled that two of his op-ed columns published in the Sunday Star Times breached public servants' rules for impartiality. Since Maharey's actions were deemed to be at the "lower end of the spectrum," Prime MinisterChris Hipkins ruled that Maharey would retain his positions as the Chair of Pharmac, ACC, and Education New Zealand.[22]