Background
Sutton was born in Reading, Berkshire, England.
Sutton was born in Reading, Berkshire, England.
He attended Timaru Boys" High School before becoming a farmer.
He has held a range of ministerial portfolios including Agriculture, Forestry, Rural Affairs, Biosecurity, and Trade Negotiations. He came to New Zealand while young, arriving in 1949. Sutton is married, and has three children.
He has held a number of offices in Federated Farmers, a nationwide agricultural association.
Sutton first stood for parliament in the election of 1981, becoming the Labour Party"s candidate for the Waitaki electorate. He was unsuccessful against National"s Jonathan Elworthy.
Most rural electorates in New Zealand traditionally support the National Party, and so Sutton"s victory as a Labour candidate was noteworthy. Sutton retained his electorate in the 1987 general election, but was defeated in the election of 1990.
He returned to farming for three years before being returned to Parliament as the Member of Parliament for Timaru in the 1993 general election.
The switch to the MMP electoral system caused significant redistribution of electorates for the 1996 general election, and Sutton became the Member of Parliament for Aoraki, which included both of his former electorates. Ministerial role
Sutton"s first ministerial role had come in the dying days of the Fourth Labour Government, shortly before he lost the Waitaki electorate. He served as Minister of Agriculture and Minister of Forestry for most of 1990, leaving cabinet when Labour was defeated in that year"s election.
He resumed his Agriculture portfolio while also becoming Minister for Rural Affairs and Minister for Trade Negotiations.
In 2001, he gained the Biosecurity portfolio, and in 2002, he regained the Forestry portfolio. In the December 2004 cabinet reshuffle he dropped the Forestry portfolio and for Rural Affairs became Associate Minister.
Retirement from politics
In the 2005 general election, Sutton lost his electorate by a substantial margin, facing the biggest drop in support in any electorate. This has been contributed to anger over things such as school closures, and his role in the "speeding motorcade" affair.
He remained in parliament as a list Member of Parliament, but announced his retirement from politics on 10 July 2006, effective from 1 August 2006.
He was replaced from the Labour list by Charles Chauvel. Sutton subsequently became Ambassador for Trade and the chairman of Landcorp, an appointment renewed by the National government in 2009.
He was also Director of Trustbank South Canterbury, chaired the New Zealand Aids Foundation, served as a board member of the Public Health Commission, and was Deputy Chair of both the New Zealand Lotteries Commission and Meridian Energy.