Bruce Windsor Cliffe (24 September 1946 – 13 July 2022) was a New Zealand businessman and politician.
Cliffe married Josephine Jessie Winefield in 1969. They were to have one son and two daughters.
In 1994 he proposed Water Services Limited (Auckland Emergency water supply) bill.
In 1995, with the first mixed-member proportional (MMP) representation election impending in 1996, he resigned his cabinet posts and was a founder member of the United New Zealand Party, initially led by Clive Matthewson. Cliffe then unsuccessfully sought to bring about a merger of ACT and United, along with other smaller "centre" or liberal parties to create a "united" centre party for the new MMP environment. In 1996 he chose to resign from Parliament. The United New Zealand Party lost all but Peter Dunne's seat in the 1996 election, and continued in Parliament under Dunne's leadership.
On 27–29 May 1995, he participated in "Wellington After the Quake" Conference (page 191).
In 2016, Cliffe expressed his disagreement with Living Earth getting a consent to process 75,000 tonnes of garden waste annually on Puketutu Island.
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