Leander Kokkinakis
Leander Kokkinakis | |
---|---|
30th Prime Minister of Satavia Elections: 1984 | |
In office 4 June 1984 – 3 April 1987 | |
President | Theron Swart Willem Steyn |
Preceded by | Eric Edwards |
Succeeded by | Maximilian Dumfries |
Leader of the Liberal Party | |
In office 4 June 1984 – 3 April 1987 | |
Deputy | Paul Monaghan |
Preceded by | Eric Edwards |
Succeeded by | Maximilian Dumfries |
Secretary of State for Education | |
In office 18 October 1981 – 4 June 1984 | |
Prime Minister | Eric Edwards |
Preceded by | Damian Botha |
Succeeded by | Marthinus De Klerk |
Secretary of State for Health & Social Affairs | |
In office 21 May 1979 – 18 October 1981 | |
Prime Minister | Eric Edwards |
Preceded by | Lachlan Goodhue |
Succeeded by | Pieter Murell |
Member of the Satavian Parliament for St George | |
In office 29 November 1976 – 3 April 1987 | |
Succeeded by | Lucian de Groot |
Personal details | |
Born | Pietersburg, Nuvania | December 25, 1951
Citizenship | |
Political party | Liberal |
Other political affiliations | Western Freestate Social Democratic Party (1970-1974) |
Education | Springbank College |
Signature | |
Military service | |
Branch/service | Satavian Army |
Years of service | 1968-1970 |
Rank | Trooper |
Unit | Green Jackets |
| ||
---|---|---|
Term of government (1984-1987)
|
||
Leander Kokkinakis MS CSM (/liːˈændər
Kokkinakis was born in Pietersburg, Nuvania as the youngest of four boys. Kokkinakis' parents had been prominent socialists in Piraea, but following the proclamation of the Second Piraean Republic and the beginning of political repression the family fled to the Asterias - first to Eldmark and then onto Pietersburg in Nuvania, with the ultimate goal of moving to Victoriaburg in the Western Freestate, home to a large Piraean diaspora. Kokkinakis moved to Satavia aged four, and grew up in relative poverty; however, Kokkinakis was a talented artist and sportsman, and was awarded an art scholarship to Satavia's most prestigious full-boarding private school, Springbank College in Port Hope. Kokkinakis left school at 16 and completed his mandatory two year national service in the Satavian Army. Following the completion of his national service, Kokkinakis became politically active and began attending underground meetings of the Satavian Section of the Worker's International in Victoriaburg. Kokkinakis stopped attending meetings after only a few weeks, instead joining the less extreme Western Freestate Social Democratic Party in 1970. By 1974, Kokkinakis had joined the Liberal Party and had become the cartoonist for The Free Man - a Liberal Party-sponsored underground paper. Kokkinakis was arrested a year later for participating in subversive activities and interned for four months before being released. The following year, the Hope Province Provincial Guard overthrew the Government removed the National Party from power. In the 1976 election, Kokkinakis ran as the Liberal candidate for the Division of St George in Victoriaburg, comfortably defeating the Conservative & Country candidate by over 22,000 votes, thereby becoming the youngest elected representative in Satavia at the age of 24. Kokkinakis soon achieved prominence within the Liberal Party, and in 1979 was appointed Secretary of State for Health and Social Affairs by Eric Edwards. During his time as Health Secretary, Kokkinakis introduced several wide-reaching welfare bills during this time, including the Preservation of Life Act 1981 that severely limited the fees attached to hospitals (at that time there was no unified national health service in any province) and included a moratorium on ambulance callout fees that has not been lifted since. In 1981, Kokkinakis was appointed as the Education Secretary and oversaw vast changes to the Satavian federally-mandated national curriculum which brought him into conflict with many of the Provincial Education Boards. Kokkinakis was easily re-elected in 1980, and later played a vital role in helping negotiate an agreement with right-wing insurgents that lead to the end of the Satavian Crisis in late 1983. When Eric Edwards announced his intention to resign in early 1984, Kokkinakis chose to take part in a highly-contested leadership contest with little expectation of winning. However, Kokkinakis performed well in the opening rounds and soon found himself with major support from both Liberal elected representatives and the general public. Kokkinakis went on to win the leadership contest and on June 4, 1984, Edwards resigned and Kokkinakis was appointed Prime Minister later that day. Kokkinakis would lead the Liberals to a landslide electoral victory in 1984 Satavian federal election securing a supermajority, a feat not repeated since.
Kokkinakis' term as prime minister saw huge social reforms aimed at improving the quality of life in Satavia. Kokkinakis also introduced the first piece of legislation aimed at attempting to deal with complicated indigenous rights and land claims coupled with a landmark acceptance of the genocide perpetrated against minority groups in a 1985 speech called the Great Shame speech. Despite his unparalleled popularity whilst prime minister, Kokkinakis would ultimately be forced to resign following revelations of a homosexual relationship with a younger man, which was against the law in Satavia, and highly stigmatised. Whilst Kokkinakis was never charged by police, his political career would be ended by the affair.
Later in his life, Kokkinakis lived quietly in his Victoriaburg home. However, in 2007, Kokkinakis came out in favour of the legalisation of same-sex marriage in the Western Freestate, and participated in a campaign that saw the Western Freestate legalise same-sex marriage in 2009. Since, Kokkinakis has participated in social and human rights campaigns across Satavia, and has been involved in many indigenous rights campaigns since, as recently as 2022.
Early Life
Kokkinakis was born on Nativity, 25 December 1951, in Pietersburg, Nuvania the son of Stavros Kokkinakis (Piraean: Σταύρος Κοκκινάκης) and Althaia Kokkinakis (neé Katsifaras; Piraean: Ἀλθαία Κατσιφάρας). Kokkinakis was the youngest of four boys; his older siblings were Constantine (born in 1944 in Rouvas), Ioannis (born in 1946 in Rouvas) and Dimitris (born in 1949 in Hammarvik). Kokkinakis' family were Piraeans, who were forced to flee Piraea following the proclomation of the Second Piraean Republic and the beginning of political repression in Piraea. Originally from Rouvas in Sitia, Kokkinakis' parents met and married in Rouvas aged 21 in 1942. Kokkinakis' paternal grandfather had served in the Piraean Army during the Great War, serving with distinction, before being killed during the Solarian War. Kokkinakis father also served in the Piraean Army during the Solarian War.
Kokkinakis' parents, who had been trade unionists and members of the Piraean Section of the Workers' International, were forced to flee Piraea in the face of political repression in 1948. The Kokkinakis family first arrived in Hammarvik, Eldmark in late 1948. On account of his injuries, Stavros Kokkinakis struggled to find employment and by 1950, the Stavros Kokkinakis chose to move the family to Pietersburg. Nuvania had been going through a period of economic prosperity, with many Piraean immigrants employed in the construction of social housing and other construction projects. Kokkinakis soon found employment as a low-level manager, as he was able to communicate well in both Piraean and Estmerish. However, Nuvania's strict conservative rule and racial segregation made Pietersburg an increasingly hostile environment and Kokkinakis was soon put out of work. A friend of Kokkinakis living in Victoriaburg suggested they should move to Satavia and despite finding it difficult to recieve approval for his immigration request, it was eventually accepted and the family moved to Victoriaburg in 1956.
Leander Kokkinakis grew up in relative poverty, in an area of Victoriaburg known as Tarpeia. Kokkinakis' father worked two jobs in order to support his family, but the Kokkinakis family struggled nonetheless. Kokkinakis' older siblings, Constantine and Ioannis were forced to drop out of school aged 14 and 12 to help provide for the family. Kokkinakis' father eventually found work as a copper mine manager, but was killed in an industrial accident in 1960. As a result of the Western Freestate's relaxed labour laws, and the Employment (Aliens, Compensation & Regulation) Act 1952, the owners of the copper mine gave G50 in compensation, or a little over G1,200 in 2023. To help supplement the family's meager income, Kokkinakis often skipped school in order to work as a paper boy. Kokkinakis was however an extremely talented artist and sportsman, and soon found another way to make money - selling hand-drawn postcards of Victoriaburg on the street.
When Kokkinakis was 13, he was offered an art scholarship to Springbank College, an elitist all-boys private boarding school in Port Hope, traditionally reserved for members of the establishment. Kokkinakis accepted and began his first term in 1965; his contemporaries Jannie Wilson, the son of former National party Prime Minister Daniël Wilson and Paul du Plessis, the son of then-Prime Minister Jacobus du Plessis. Kokkinakis flourished on the sports field and enjoyed art classes, but struggled academically, suffered from homesickness and was bullied by his classmates. In his later life, Kokkinakis recalled being stripped naked and tied to a tree for three hours when he was 14, before a sympathetic teacher untied him. Kokkinakis also stated that the bullying intensified when his classmates accused him of being homosexual, and was a catalyst for his decision to drop out aged 16. Kokkinakis later said that his time at Springbank College, surrounded by the right-wing of Satavia's political elite, shaped his political views.
Aged 16, Kokkinakis chose to drop out of Springbank College in 1968 and was required to complete his two year mandatory national service in the Satavian Army, having acquired Satavian citizenship in 1966. Kokkinakis joined the Green Jackets that year and was stationed in Henschhoek. Kokkinakis did not enjoy his time in the Army and paticularly objected to feeling "like I was a member of the system, and in doing so I was only helping to oppress myself". Kokkinakis later revealed he struggled with his mental health whilst in the Army, and was confined to a psychiatric ward for three months in 1969 after a failed suicide attempt. Having completed his national service in 1970, Kokkinakis was honourably discharged and returned to Victoriaburg, taking a variety of jobs before finding stable employment as a construction worker. Kokkinakis continued his art, and sold paintings to help raise more money. In December 1970 his mother died after a long period of illness, having been unable to afford medical treatment.
Early political career
Early political involvement
Kokkinakis began attending secret underground meetings of the Satavian Section of the Worker's International in 1970 but stopped after a few weeks; despite his prior poor experiences with members of the elite, he felt the approach taken by the party was too extreme and instead began an association with the Western Freestate Social Democratic Party. Kokkinakis spoke often, and became well known as a fiery, passionate and relatable orator.
By 1974, however, Kokkinakis had left the Western Freestate branch of the SDP and joined an underground group of Liberals, responsible for printing The Free Man, a Liberal-backed paper that was widely read in Victoriaburg, despite the local authorities best efforts to stop its publication. Kokkinakis also began his correspondence with the exiled Eric Edwards, the leader of the Liberal Party, who was living in Rizealand at the time. Kokkinakis also befriended future cabinet ally Stefanos Dimitriadis around this time, and the two became joint-editors of The Free Man together. Kokkinakis also became the cartoonist for the newspapers, under the pseudonym B. B. Botha, and his caricatures of various National Party politicians were extremely popular, and distributed illegally throughout Satavia. Many of his caricatures were also published in the Estmerish press, with the Standard running a column featuring Kokkinakis' caricatures entitled "With news from our former step-child". Following a caricature of Prime Minister Hendrik Botha that depicted him as a chubby orangutang pinning medals to his own chest, whilst in floods of tears, saying "Why won't anyone love me?!" in November 1975, Kokkinakis and several others were arrested for participating in subversive activities, and were interned. Kokkinakis was held without charge for four months in Causeway Prison before being released in early 1976.
As the National Party began to lose control over the country, Kokkinakis began openly giving speeches in Victoriaburg calling for the removal of the National Party and a return to free elections. Kokkinakis' openness soon earned him support amongst the local populace, and he became the face of the Liberal Party in the Western Freestate. In September 1976, the Hope Province Provincial Guard removed the National Party from power and later that same day, Kokkinakis lead a mob of people, supported by local policeman, to the provincial parliament of the Western Freestate, where Kokkinakis and the police removed the Premier of the Western Freestate, TBD Name from parliament.
Backbench MP
Once Johannes Klopper, who was serving as interim Prime Minister, reinstated the Satavia Act, 1936 and repealed the Satavia Acts issued by the National Party, Klopper made it clear he intended to call for a federal election as soon as possible. Kokkinakis, partly in thanks to his Piraean roots, was selected to run in the Division of St George in the hastily drawn-up electoral map (itself based off the electoral map of 1936). St George was the only minority-dominated electoral division, where some 81% of voters were of Piraean ancestry in 1976.
Kokkinakis was running against three other mainstream candidates; Hubert Giroud of the Conservative & Country party, Louise McKay of the United Party and Peter Clifton of the SDP. Kokkinakis and Giroud emerged as front-runners in the division, and lead vastly differing campaigns. Giroud attacked Kokkinakis at every stage; including referring to him on multiple occasions as "flamboyant" and a "quean". Kokkinakis chose to run a quiet campaign, confident in victory amongst the large Piraean electorate. On November 6 - just twenty days out from polling day, Giroud was quoted, perhaps inaccurately, as calling for an end to mass immigration and suggesting Satavia would be "flooded with ethnics, koelies and dirty migrants". Kokkinakis used the quote against him on late-campaign posters and even quoted it in a speach he gave on November 20. Kokkinakis would go onto win the division in a landslide; taking a 22,176 majority and becoming Satavia's youngest elected MP, aged 24.
Despite his friendship with Eric Edwards, Kokkinakis was not offered a cabinet position. Edwards later stated that had the Liberals won an outright majority - and not been forced into a three-party coalition with Labour and the SDP, Kokkinakis would almost certainly have been offered a cabinet position. Undeterred, and despite having no legal history, Kokkinakis played a key role in the drafting and writing of the Satavia Act of 1976, and by extension, the alterations to the Satavian constitution.
In 1978, Kokkinakis lead a campaign targeting the lack of healthcare provisions across Satavia, and the unavailability of healthcare in many parts of the country, paticularly by the poorest in society. Kokkinakis was appointed to the House of Representatives Committee on Healthcare, and encouraged the Prime Minister to introduce legislation that would help bring about the creation of a federal-supported welfare state, as seen in Euclea. Despite having Edwards' support, the SDP were against the proposals - their leader Patrick Turcan, writing to Edwards, explained - "it's simply not viable... we cannot expect the poor to pay for the rich to see a doctor". Despite the setback, Kokkinakis whipped up public support and demonstrated his characteristic charisma, declaring to a crowd at a political rally in Port Hope - "why should we die needlessly whilst they profit?". Kokkinakis pursuaded Edwards to introduce the Healthcare Bill in late 1978; it passed through the House of Representatives in its second reading, but was thrown out by the Senate.
Cabinet minister
In Edwards' 1979 cabinet reshuffle, Kokkinakis, who by now had earned a reputation as an fiery speaker and an authority on healthcare, was appointed Secretary of State for Health & Social Affairs, replacing Lachlan Goodhue. In Kokkinakis' maiden speech, he called for "a hurricane of reform" and attacked the private healthcare providers, many of which had been established by and with the support of the National Party government. Just one month into his role, Kokkinakis introduced the Federal Insurance (Healthcare) Bill to parliament. The bill aimed at providing federal health insurance to those living below the income tax threshold, and despite some difficulties in the House of Representatives, ultimately passed through the senate with the support of the United Party. Kokkinakis later described it as his "first achievement", and according to Estmerish historian Sigur Haroldsson, the act paved the way for the resurrection of the Satavian welfare state that had been started by Sydney Warwick in the 1900s.
In the 1980 election, Kokkinakis easily won re-election, extending his margin of victory to 44,359 votes (at that time a record, only surpassed by himself in 1984 and later Edward Norton in 2009). During his campaign, Kokkinakis spent only four of the fifty-two day campaign in his own constituency.
In a debate in the House of Representatives on March 16 1981, Kokkinakis was forced to apologise after referring to Theophillus Verwoerd, the leader of the United Party, as a "pissant of a man, [and] a miserable excuse for a human being". The incident marked the first in a long line of insults that Kokkinakis used to refer to his political rivals that were regarded as uncouth but nonetheless effective, and endeared him to the Satavian public.
Despite holding a relatively minor ministerial position, a 1981 survey found that Kokkinakis was the third most recognisable politician, after Eric Edwards and Ben De Villiers.