Elected to Parliament in 1958 as a member of the United Federal Party, he was a founding member of the Rhodesian Front party in 1962. He joined the Cabinet in 1976 upon being appointed Minister of Agriculture. In 1977, he was named Minister of Local Government and Housing and Minister of Internal Affairs. In December 1978, he resigned from the Cabinet, from Parliament, and from the party, in protest at the Prime Minister's rejection of British-American plans for Rhodesia's transition to majority rule. He ran as an independent in the by-election for his former seat in Parliament, but lost. He soon moved to South Africa, where he lived until his death.
Hayman returned to Southern Rhodesia in 1949, taking up work as a conservation and extension officer until 1955.[4] He later purchased land and took up farming in Shamva, a town in the northern Mashonaland region.[1][4] He went on to serve as chairman of the Shamva Farmers' Association, chairman of the Shamva Parents' Association, and director of the Rhodesian Farmers' Syndicates.[4]
In 1962, he became a founding member of the right-wing Rhodesian Front party, which opposed transitioning Southern Rhodesia to independence under black majority rule. Hayman ran for reelection as the Rhodesian Front candidate for the Mazoe constituency in the 1962 elections.[6] He won with 56% of the vote, defeating the United Federal Party candidate Neil Patrick Hammond.[6] At a 2 December 1962 meeting, the Rhodesian Front parliamentary caucus met and returned a vote of no confidence in Prime Minister Winston Field.[7] Hayman was one of only two RF members to vote against the motion, alongside Jack Howman.[7]
On 27 December 1978, Hayman resigned from his cabinet posts, from Parliament, and from the Rhodesian Front.[8][9][10][11][12] He charged that Prime Minister Ian Smith was "leading Rhodesians into a trap" by rejecting Western plans for majority rule.[9][10] Hayman favored the plan put forward by the United States and United Kingdom in which Rhodesia would revert to British rule under a commissioner, assisted by United Nationspeacekeepers, who would oversee elections and the transition to black rule.[8] He thought that any black government elected under Smith's plan, in which 28% of the government was to be reserved for whites, would collapse or be overthrown by guerrillas, resulting in Marxist rule in Rhodesia.[8][9][10] In a political meeting in Enkeldoorn, Hayman also argued that Smith was misleading the country by claiming that Rhodesia had a good change of gaining international recognition following the elections.[11] Additionally, he thought it would be impossible to organize the elections by December 31, the date stipulated by the Internal Settlement.[13]
The resignation of Hayman, a staunch conservative and a close ally of the Prime Minister, was seen as a blow to the transitional government.[10][14] Prime Minister Ian Smith later said that he had asked Hayman to resign when he learned he was planning to leave Rhodesia.[14] He said:
"Therefore I informed him that it would be right and proper for him to resign from his ministerial post. From experience, I have found in some cases—and I stress the word some—when people have made up their minds to leave Rhodesia, they adopt an unbalanced and defeatist attitude and therefore it would have been wrong for Mr. Hayman to continue in public office."
The day he resigned, Hayman announced that he would run as an independent for his former seat in Parliament in the special election.[8] The byelection, held on 6 February 1979, was the last election conducted before the advent of the new constitution. Hayman lost the election with 20% of the vote to Cecil Millar, the Rhodesian Front candidate. Soon after, he moved to South Africa.
Personal life and death
Hayman died, aged 82, on 3 April 2008 at home in the Amberglen retirement community in Howick, KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa.[2] He was married to Madeline Elizabeth, with two children, one son and one daughter.[1][4] He played tennis and golf.[1]