Some features of our website won't work with Internet Explorer. Improve your experience by using a more up-to-date browser like Chrome, Firefox, or Edge.
Skip to content

Places

Places related to your search results. This map shows just part of our unpublished collections – there's more coming as we add location information to records. Learn how to use the map.

We can connect 11 things related to Clinton, Hillary Diane Rodham, 1947-, Foreign relations, and TAPUHI to the places on this map.
Image

Scott, Tom, 1947- :Twenty-four cartoons published in the Evening Post between 1 Decembe...

Date: 1998 - 1999

By: Scott, Thomas Joseph, 1947-; Evening Post (Wellington, N.Z.)

Reference: H-539-063/086

Description: General Pinochet complains about not being allowed to travel freely. Comment on the Minister of Defence's policy. Opposition Leader, Helen Clark, tells the public about National's intended defence spending. New Zealand's energy resources are put up for sale. Vultures gather around National's leader, Jenny Shipley. Jenny Shipley celebrates her first year as leader of the National Party. Boris Yeltsin reassures Russians he is still alive and running the country even though he is on an intravenous drip of Vodka. Finance Minister, Bill Birch in a pool after his attempt in the NZ Economic Free Fall Competitions. Jenny Shipley passes his togs, which he forgot to put on. Comment on the commercialisation of professional cricket. The House Judiciary Committee sit in judgement over President Clinton in the Lewinsky scandal. New ACC law allows victims the right to sue. Paul East quits politics to take up a cushy post for Foreign Affairs in London. Leaked conversations of Gilbert Myles. US military are relaxed about Iraqi missiles aimed at US Republicans. Jenny Shipley visits Bill Clinton. The world tryys to understand why Serbian security forces commit such terrible atrocitities. The Serbians say 'Because they can' Rachel Hunter and Jerry Hall discuss why they got rid of their rock star husbands. Pam Corkery quits politics. Bill Clinton tells the nation about the state of his relations with his wife Hillary following the Lewinsky allegations. The International Olympic Committee get 1st, 2nd and 3rd for Corruption, Greed and Arrogance. Monica Lewinsky is called to Washington for a high-level debriefing. The Government's response to people's needs following the storms in Northland. Sweetwaters festival leaves a mountain of unpaid debtors. Jenny Shipley advocates her favoured MMP option. Quantity: 24 cartoon bromide(s). Physical Description: B5 size bromides.

Online Image

"What with Warner Brothers and Mrs Clinton the old forelock's taken a terrible tugging ...

Date: 2010

From: Tremain, Garrick, 1941- :[Digital cartoons published in the Otago Daily Times]

Reference: DCDL-0016030

Description: PM John Key is having a haircut; the barber comments that what with the 'Warner Brothers and Mrs Clinton the old forelock's taken a terrible tugging this week'. He is referring to the deferential treatment John Key will have given both the Warner Brothers in his desperate negotiations to have the Hobbit films made in New Zealand, and to Secretary of State Hilary Clinton during her visit to New Zealand in which the 'Wellington Declaration' that 'formalises a new strategic partnership between New Zealand and the United States was signed. Quantity: 1 digital cartoon(s).

Add to cart
Online Image

"The nukes stay banned, but feel free to keep venting your bilge tanks." 8 November 2010

Date: 2010

From: Body, Guy Keverne, 1967-: Digital cartoons published in New Zealand Herald

Reference: DCDL-0016372

Description: Hillary Clinton American Secretary of State prepares to leave New Zealand on a large ship which is emptying its bilge tanks that represent 'culture' into the sea. PM John Key stands on the jetty and says 'The nukes stay banned but feel free to keep venting your bilge tanks'. Context; American Secretary of State Hillary Clinton's visit to New Zealand in November. The NZ-US Council says the signing of the Wellington Declaration will lead to even closer ties between New Zealand and the United States. NZ-US Council executive director Stephen Jacobi said it would have benefits for both parties in terms of political co-operation, trade, security and defence and sustainable development. The nuclear ban policy would require a referendum before making changes although Wikileaks indicates that some National MPs would certainly like to get rid of it. (NZ Herald 11 January 2011) Quantity: 1 digital cartoon(s).

Add to cart
Online Image

"I declare I'm *@&!# off with the mid term election results in the U.S.!!" 4 November 2010

Date: 2010

From: Hubbard, James, 1949-: Digital caricatures and cartoons

Reference: DCDL-0016055

Description: American Secretary of State Hillary Clinton stands at a podium in Washington reading the 'Wellington Declaration'. She says 'I declare I'm *!!#** off with the mid term election results in the U.S.!!' The 'Wellington Declaration' was a document signed by Hillary Clinton and Minister of Foreign Affairs Murray McCully during Clinton's brief visit to New Zealand in early November 2010; it signaled a new era of partnership with an agreement by Hillary Clinton and PM John Key to hold annual political military talks, regular ministerial level meetings, and to work together in the Pacific region on energy and natural disaster response projects. The mid-term election results showed an expected swing against Obama and the Democrats. Quantity: 1 digital cartoon(s).

Add to cart
Online Image

The Clinton-Key Encounter and The Elephant in the Room. 5 November 2010

Date: 2010

From: Brockie, Robert Ellison, 1932- :Digital caricatures and cartoons

Reference: DCDL-0015989

Description: Prime Minister John Key and American Secretary of State Hilary Clinton sit facing one another across a table as an enormous dragon representing China rears up behind them. The title reads 'The Clinton-Key encounter and the elephant in the room'. The encounter took place when Hilary Clinton visited New Zealand in early November; the two signed the 'Wellington Declaration that 'formalises a new strategic partnership between the two countries, commits to regular meetings at foreign minister level, working together on trade and holding annual military talks'. Refers on the one hand to the free trade deals that are so important to New Zealand and that, thanks to a trading partnership signed in 2008, means that New Zealand now sells to China in seven hours what it used to sell in all of 1972. Refers on the other hand to the sovereignty disputes over the Spratly and Paracel island chains, which are potentially rich in natural resources, have pitted China against some of its neighbors, including Vietnam, Malaysia, Brunei and the Philippines. Clinton said the United States and every other nation "has a national interest in freedom of navigation, open access to Asia's maritime commons, and respect for international law in the South China Sea," which contains some of the busiest commercial sea lanes in the world and so she says the Obama administration wants claimants to pursue their disputes in accordance with the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea rather than through coercion. (America.gov - 23 July 2010) Quantity: 1 digital cartoon(s).

Add to cart
Online Image

The one truly indispensable watch from the Hillary saga. 15 December 2010

Date: 2010

From: Body, Guy Keverne, 1967-: Digital cartoons published in New Zealand Herald

Reference: DCDL-0016374

Description: The cartoon depicts a Mickey Mouse watch and includes the text 'The one truly indispensable watch from the Hillary saga'. Context; refers to American Secretary of State Hillary Clinton's visit to New Zealand in November to sign the Wellington Declaration. Also refers to Sir Edmund Hillary's widow June, Lady Hillary offering his watches for sale at a Swiss auction house. The sale of one watch was halted by the Ministry of Culture and Heritage. Quantity: 1 digital cartoon(s).

Add to cart
Online Image

"What can I get for 49 cents, two buttons and a marble?" 2 November 2010

Date: 2010

From: Evans, Malcolm Paul, 1945- :Digital cartoons

Reference: DCDL-0015977

Description: Minister of Foreign Affairs Murray McCully offers 49 cents, two buttons and a marble to the owner of a 'Military Fireworks' shop and asks what he can get. The owner is outraged. Refers to the signing between PM John Key and US Secretary of State Hilary Clinton on the occasion of her November visit to New Zealand of the 'Wellington Declaration' that 'formalises a new strategic partnership between the two countries, commits to regular meetings at foreign minister level, working together on trade and holding annual military talks'.Mr McCully told Morning Report there have always been limitations on interactions because of New Zealand's nuclear free legislation."It means that while Australia and the United States have an alliance, we don't have one, and we had to try and find a new, positive way of expressing a partnership that wasn't an alliance." (Radio New Zealand News - 5 November 2010) Refers also to the news that the Defence Force is to be overhauled in a radical plan that will see military bases consolidated and current spending trimmed by up to $400 million a year to help fund big ticket purchases. A government White Paper said today the outcome would be a "smaller, modernised and upgraded defence estate", in which private sector financing and expertise might be used for some functions. (Stuff 2 November 2010) Quantity: 2 digital cartoon(s).

Add to cart
Online Image

Evans, Malcolm Paul, 1945- :New Zealand welcomes US interest in the Pacific region..'. ...

Date: 2012

From: Evans, Malcolm Paul, 1945- :Digital cartoons

By: Fairfax Media Limited (Firm)

Reference: DCDL-0022770

Description: Shows in six cameos various political statements announced by one person while a second person translates them into what they really mean. Context: First cameo is PM John Key and American Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, the second refers to the Maori Council's claim on water rights in an attempt to derail asset sales, third refers to the battle over 'GMOs' (genetically modified organisms), the fourth is about the uproar over where sexual offender Stewart Murray Wilson will live as compared with nowhere to live for many Christchurch people, and the sixth is about the politicisation of child poverty in NZ. Colour and black and white versions available Quantity: 2 digital cartoon(s).

Add to cart
Online Image

Hubbard, James, 1949- :'Get word out - apparently the reason we mis-quoted the NZ P.M. ...

Date: 2012

From: Hubbard, James, 1949-: Digital caricatures and cartoons

By: Setford News Photo Agency

Reference: DCDL-0022944

Description: Shows two officials in the United States State Department hastening to correct an error in which they blamed the wind for mis-quoting Prime Minister John Key. Context: refers to the obliteration of parts of Prime Minister John Key's comments in a news conference with Secretary of State Hillary Clinton at the Pacific Islands Forum. There was no wind that day and it seems that blaming the wind was a noble effort by the State Department to save face for Key, who already faces some mockery for his diction, even from New Zealanders. (Claire Trevett in the NZ Herald) Quantity: 1 digital cartoon(s).

Add to cart
Online Image

Body, Guy Keverne, 1967-:'The nukes stay banned, but feel free to keep venting your bil...

Date: 2011

From: Body, Guy Keverne, 1967-: Digital cartoons published in New Zealand Herald

By: New Zealand herald (Newspaper); Body, Guy Keverne, 1967-

Reference: DCDL-0018993

Description: Prime Minister John Key stands on a jetty and talks to the American Secretary of State Hilary Clinton, who stands on a United States' ship. John Key says 'The nukes stay banned but feel free to keep venting your bilge tanks.' A substance representing 'culture' pours from a bilge tank. Context: Hilary Clinton visited New Zealand in November 2010. New Zealand still enforces the ban on nuclear-powered and nuclear-armed ships in her waters. But American 'culture' is here to stay. Quantity: 1 digital cartoon(s).

Add to cart
Image

Tremain, Garrick 1941-:49 cartoons on political and social subjects published in the Ot...

Date: 2000

By: Tremain, Garrick, 1941-

Reference: H-616-001/050

Description: 49 cartoons on political and social subjects published in the Otago Daily Times. Topics include the Olympic Games in Sydney, drugs in sport, rugby, women's hockey, corruption in sport (cricket), the falling value of New Zealand dollar, economic woes, the Government's 'Closing the Gaps' policy, superannuation, the dole, taxation and business, student loans, New Zealand's outwards migration, overstayers in New Zealand, televising of parliament, the political style of Helen Clark and of Marian Hobbs, the Coalition, parental leave, Jim Anderton's proposal for a 'Peoples' Bank', travel health scare, health issues and the Treaty of Waitangi, the proposed extension of the matrimonial property act to same sex partners, animal testing, prison sentences, railway crossing accidents and Transrail, Serbian elections, the United States Presidential election, conflict and bigotry in the Middle East, subdivision issues in Queenstown, and pets. corruption in sport (swimming) sexism in sport heavy use of commercials between television coverage of Olympic Games Helen Clark and Jenny Shipley fight for the attention of Australian Premier, Howard New Zealands monetary woes Labour Party and business relationship hindered by compliance costs Treaty of Waitangi considerations in hospital waiting list priorities, childrens role-models, blood clots durin air travel, MP's travel perks. Quantity: 49 original cartoon(s). Physical Description: A4 photocopies

Back to top