In 2006, Satyanand was appointed
Governor-General by
Queen Elizabeth II on the advice of the New Zealand government under Prime Minister
Helen Clark. He succeeded
Dame Silvia Cartwright as governor-general on 23 August 2006. His appointment was welcomed by every parliamentary party leader. He was the first governor-general of Indian descent (as well as non-white and non-Maori cum Asian-origin) and the first
Roman Catholic governor-general.
Prince Richard, Duke of Gloucester, Grand Prior of the Order of St John, received Satyanand as governor-general designate on 7 July 2006 and invested him as a
Knight of Justice of the Most Venerable Order of the Hospital of St John of Jerusalem. In May 2007 changes were made to the
Queen's Service Order, which meant that the governor-general could be appointed a
Companion of the Order in their own right, rather than as ex-officio Principal Companion but not a Member of the Order. The first bill to which Satyanand granted
Royal Assent was the Coroners Bill. Starting on New Year's Day 2009, Satyanand issued a "New Year's Message" intended to highlight "issues New Zealanders might consider as they looked to the future". Satyanand was the first governor-general not to hold a
knighthood before entering office (Colonel
Thomas Gore Browne, Governor of New Zealand 1855–1861, was knighted in office). However, following the changes to the New Zealand honours system announced by Prime Minister
John Key on 8 March 2009, the Queen approved Satyanand's redesignation from a Principal Companion in the
New Zealand Order of Merit (PCNZM) to a Knight Grand Companion of that Order (GNZM) on 27 March 2009. On assuming the role of governor-general, Satyanand received the style
The Honourable for life; in 2010, he was advanced to the style of
The Right Honourable. This style was accorded for life to all future governors-general, prime ministers, chief justices, and Speakers of Parliament. Satyanand completed his term of office as governor-general on 23 August 2011. The New Zealand Government pays for the costs associated with the Queen's representative, the governor-general, in their exercising of the powers of the Crown on behalf of the Queen, including travel, security, residences, offices, and ceremonial occasions. In 2010, these costs were reported publicly for the first time. In the 2010 Budget, the total cost of supporting the governor-general was $3,591,000 for Support Services and Maintenance of the residences, $1,710,000 for Depreciation on Government Houses, $1,279,000 Remuneration and Travel and an estimated $1,680,000 for Policy Advice and Co-ordination; a total of $7,610,000 and $11 million on capital investment in
Government House, Wellington, entailing significant renovation and conservation which had been overdue for many years, and totaled more than $18 million. During the 3 years of construction, the Satyanands did not live in the residence. On 30 November 2006, Satyanand hosted a meeting between the
Prime Minister of Fiji,
Laisenia Qarase, and Fiji's
military commander,
Commodore Frank Bainimarama, at
Government House in
Wellington in the context of an escalating crisis in Fiji. The discussions between Qarase and Bainimarama were chaired by New Zealand's then Foreign Minister,
Winston Peters. This was the last serious effort by the international community to avert a
military coup, which followed on 5 December. At the opening of a new train station in New Lynn, in Auckland in 2010, Satyanand stated that heavy investment in motorways and the decline of public transport after trams were taken off the roads in the 1950s had led to severe congestion to the detriment of both individuals and the economy. On 5 October 2010, a host of
TVNZ's Breakfast show,
Paul Henry questioned whether Satyanand was "even a New Zealander". He then repeated the question, asking the Prime Minister about how he would select Satyanand's replacement, "Are you going to choose a New Zealander who looks and sounds like a New Zealander this time ... are we going to go for someone who is more like a New Zealander this time?" Henry attracted criticism from both sides of politics and New Zealand's
race relations conciliator Joris de Bres. Henry later apologised, was suspended, and then resigned from TVNZ. ==Subsequent roles==