This Quick Guide provides information
about Indigenous Australian parliamentarians in federal and state/territory
parliaments. For the purposes of this Quick Guide, ‘Indigenous parliamentarian’
refers to a parliamentarian who identifies as an Aboriginal or Torres Strait
Islander or as having Aboriginal or Torres Strait Islander ancestry.
While every effort has been made to ensure the accuracy of
this Quick Guide, it cannot be guaranteed to be comprehensive. The
Parliamentary Library would appreciate receiving any additional information or amendments
that would assist in compiling future updates.
This Quick Guide lists the name, party, chamber,
state/electorate, dates in office, identity (where readily available) and
significant firsts. This information is compiled from a range of publicly
available sources including the Commonwealth Parliamentary
Handbook, The Biographical
Dictionary of the Australian Senate, the websites of Australian state
and territory parliaments, political websites and personal biographies.
Additionally, we are grateful to the state and territory parliamentary
libraries for their assistance in compiling this Quick Guide.
Party and chamber abbreviations
AD
|
Australian Democrats
|
ALP
|
Australian Labor Party
|
CLP
|
Country Liberal Party
|
GRN
|
Australian Greens
|
IND
|
Independent
|
JLN
|
Jacqui Lambie Network
|
LIB
|
Liberal Party of Australia
|
LNP
|
Liberal National Party
|
NP
|
National Party
|
PUP
|
Palmer United Party
|
Chambers
|
HA
|
House of Assembly
|
LA
|
Legislative Assembly
|
LC
|
Legislative Council
|
Reps
|
House of Representatives
|
Indigenous Australian federal
parliamentarians
As of June 2021, the 46th Parliament includes six
parliamentarians who identify as Indigenous or as having Indigenous heritage—two
members of the House of Representatives and four senators:
- Linda
Burney, MP (ALP, Barton, NSW)
- Ken
Wyatt, MP (LIB, Hasluck, WA)
- Senator
Pat Dodson (ALP, WA)
- Senator
Jacqui Lambie (JLN, Tas.)
- Senator
Malarndirri McCarthy (ALP, NT) and
- Senator
Lidia Thorpe (GRN, Vic.).
Significant firsts
- Neville Bonner (LIB; IND, Qld) was the first Indigenous
member of any Australian parliament, appointed to the Senate on
11 June 1971.
- Ken Wyatt (LIB, Hasluck, WA) was the first Indigenous
member of the House of Representatives, elected on 21 August 2010. He
is also the first Indigenous person to hold assistant ministerial, ministerial,
and Cabinet roles in the Australian Government:
- Assistant
Minister for Health, appointed 30 September 2015
- Minister
for Aged Care, appointed 24 January 2017 and
- (Cabinet)
Minister for Indigenous Australians, appointed 29 May 2019.
- Nova Peris (ALP, NT) was the first Indigenous Australian
woman elected to the Senate in 2013.
- Linda Burney (ALP, Barton, NSW) was the first female Indigenous
Australian elected to the House of Representatives on 2 July 2016.
- David Kennedy (ALP, Bendigo, Vic.) was the first
Indigenous Australian to be elected to both a state/territory parliament and
the federal parliament. He was first elected at a by-election as the ALP member
for Bendigo in the House of Representatives in 1969 and served until his defeat
at the 1972 federal election. In 1982 he was elected to the Victorian
Legislative Assembly, serving for approximately 10 years. Kennedy’s Indigenous
heritage was unknown when he entered both parliaments nor did he self-identify
as Indigenous at that time. For these reasons Neville Bonner is recorded as the
first Indigenous parliamentarian.
- Linda Burney (ALP, Barton, NSW) and Malarndirri
McCarthy (ALP, NT) are the first Indigenous women to be elected to both a
state/territory parliament and the federal parliament. They served in the New
South Wales and Northern Territory parliaments, respectively, prior to both
being elected to the Federal Parliament on 2 July 2016.
- Aden Ridgeway (AD, NSW) was the first
Aboriginal person to use an Australian Indigenous language in the Federal Parliament.
In his first
speech to the Senate delivered on 25 August 1999, he stated:
On this special occasion, I
make my presence known as an Aborigine and to this chamber I say, perhaps for
the first time: Nyandi baaliga Jaingatti. Nyandi mimiga Gumbayynggir. Nya
jawgar yaam Gumbayynggir. Translated, it means: My father is Dhunghutti. My
mother is Gumbayynggir. And, therefore, I am Gumbayynggir.
Table 1: list of Indigenous Australian federal parliamentarians,
by date first elected
Source: Compiled by the
Parliamentary Library.
*Selected
under Section 15 of the Australian
Constitution in the Senate or at a by-election in
the House of Representatives.
^Aden Ridgeway was elected to the Senate 3.10.1998,
his term began 1.7.1999.
#Jacqui Lambie was elected to the Senate
7.9.2013, her term began 1.7.2014.
**Jacqui
Lambie resigned on 14.11.2017 and was subsequently disqualified by the
High Court on 8.12.2017, pursuant to section 44(i) of the Constitution.
Indigenous Australian state/territory parliamentarians
Significant firsts
- Hyacinth Tungutalum (CLP, NT Legislative Assembly) was the
first Indigenous Australian elected to a state/territory parliament in October
1974.
- Carol Martin (ALP, WA Legislative Assembly) was the first
female Indigenous Australian elected to any Australian parliament in February
2001.
- Ernie Bridge (ALP; IND, WA Legislative Assembly) was the
first Indigenous Australian to hold a ministerial role and Cabinet position in
any Australian government in July 1986 as Minister for Water Resources, the
North-West and Aboriginal Affairs.
- Marion Scrymgour (ALP; IND; ALP, NT Legislative Assembly) was
the first female Indigenous Australian to hold a ministerial position in
December 2003 as Minister for Family and Community Services, and Environment
and Heritage. On 26
November 2007 (p. 20) she was appointed Deputy Chief Minister of the
NT, becoming (at that time) the highest-ranked
Indigenous parliamentarian in Australian history.
- Adam Giles (CLP, NT Legislative Assembly) was the first
(and so far, only) Indigenous Australian head of government, serving as Chief
Minister of the NT from 14 March 2013 to 27 August 2016.
- Chansey Paech (ALP, NT Legislative Assembly) was the first
Indigenous Australian appointed as Speaker of any Australian parliament in June
2020, shortly before the 2020 NT election.
- Ngaree Ah Kit (ALP, NT Legislative Assembly) was the first
female Indigenous Australian appointed as Speaker of any Australian parliament
in October 2020.
The information in Table 2 is derived from state/territory
parliament websites, as such the data has not been standardised. The following
parliamentarians are listed under each state/territory in order of date first
elected.
Table 2:
list of state/territory Indigenous Australian parliamentarians, by state/territory
Northern Territory[2]
(22 parliamentarians) |
Name
|
Party
|
Chamber (Division)
|
Dates in office
|
Hyacinth Tungutalum
|
CLP
|
LA (Tiwi)
|
19.10.1974–13.8.1977 resigned
|
Neville Perkins
|
ALP
|
LA (Macdonnell)
|
13.8.1977–6.3.1981 resigned
|
Wesley Lanhupuy
|
ALP
|
LA (Arnhem)
|
3.12.1983–25.8.1995 resigned
|
Stanley Tipiloura
|
ALP
|
LA (Arafura)
|
7.3.1987–20.9.1992 died in office
|
Maurice Rioli
|
ALP
|
LA (Arafura)
|
*7.11.1992–17.8.2001 resigned
|
John (Jack) Ah Kit
|
ALP
|
LA (Arnhem)
|
*7.10.1995–17.6.2005 resigned
|
Marion Scrymgour
|
ALP; IND from June 2009; ALP from August 2009
|
LA (Arafura)
|
18.08.2001–24.8.2012 resigned
|
Elliot McAdam
|
ALP
|
LA (Barkly)
|
18.8.2001–8.8.2008 resigned
|
Matthew Bonson
|
ALP
|
LA (Millner)
|
18.8.2001–8.8.2008 defeated
|
Malarndirri McCarthy
|
ALP
|
LA (Arnhem)
|
18.6.2005–24.8.2012 defeated
|
Alison Anderson
|
ALP; IND from August 2009; CLP from September 2011; PUP
from April 2014; IND from November 2014
|
LA (Macdonnell)
LA (Namatjira)
|
18.6.2005–24.8.2012
25.8.2012–26.8.2016 resigned
|
Karl Hampton
|
ALP
|
LA (Stuart)
|
*23.9.2006–24.8.2012 defeated
|
Adam Giles
|
CLP
|
LA (Braitling)
|
9.8.2008–26.8.2016 defeated
|
Francis Kurrupuwu
|
CLP; PUP from April 2014; CLP from September 2014
|
LA (Arafura)
|
25.8.2012–26.8.2016 defeated
|
Kenneth (Ken) Vowles
|
ALP
|
LA (Johnston)
|
25.8.2012–31.1.2020 resigned
|
Larisa Lee
|
CLP; PUP from May 2014; IND from November 2014
|
LA (Arnhem)
|
25.8.2012–26.8.2016 defeated
|
Bess Price
|
CLP
|
LA (Stuart)
|
25.8.2012–26.8.2016 defeated
|
Lawrence
Costa
|
ALP
|
LA (Arafura)
|
27.8.2016–current
|
Selena Uibo
|
ALP
|
LA (Arnhem)
|
27.8.2016–current
|
Ngaree Ah
Kit
|
ALP
|
LA (Karama)
|
27.8.2016–current
|
Chanston
(Chansey) Paech
|
ALP
|
LA (Namatjira)
LA (Gwoja)
|
27.8.2016–21.8.2020
22.8.2020–current
|
Yingiya
(Mark) Guyula
|
IND
|
LA (Mulka)
|
27.8.2016–current
|
Queensland (five
parliamentarians) |
Name
|
Party
|
Chamber (Division)
|
Dates in office
|
Eric
Deeral
|
NP
|
LA (Cook)
|
7.12.1974–12.11.1977 defeated
|
Leeanne
Enoch
|
ALP
|
LA (Algester)
|
31.1.2015–current
|
William
(Billy) Gordon
|
ALP; IND from March 2015
|
LA (Cook)
|
31.1.2015–24.11.2017 resigned
|
Cynthia
Liu
|
ALP
|
LA (Cook)
|
25.11.2017–current
|
Lance
McCallum
|
ALP
|
LA (Bundamba)
|
28.3.2020–current
|
Victoria (four parliamentarians) |
Name
|
Party
|
Chamber (Division)
|
Dates in office
|
Cyril
Kennedy
|
ALP
|
LC (Waverley)
|
5.5.1979–2.10.1992 defeated
|
Andrew
(David) Kennedy
|
ALP
|
LA (Bendigo)
LA (Bendigo West)
|
3.4.1982–1.3.1985
2.3.1985–2.10.1992 defeated
|
Lidia
Thorpe
|
GRN
|
LA (Northcote)
|
18.11.2017–19.12.2018 defeated
|
Sheena
Watt
|
ALP
|
LC (Northern Metropolitan)
|
13.10.2020–current
|
Western Australia (seven
parliamentarians) |
Name
|
Party
|
Chamber (Division)
|
Dates in office
|
Ernest
(Ernie) Bridge
|
ALP; IND from July 1996
|
LA (Kimberley)
|
23.2.1980–10.2.2001 resigned
|
Carol
Martin
|
ALP
|
LA (Kimberley)
|
10.2.2001–9.3.2013 resigned
|
Benjamin
(Ben) Wyatt
|
ALP
|
LA (Victoria Park)
|
*11.3.2006–13.3.2021 resigned
|
Josephine
(Josie) Farrer
|
ALP
|
LA (Kimberley)
|
9.3.2013–13.3.2021 resigned
|
Zak
Kirkup
|
LIB
|
LA (Dawesville)
|
11.3.2017–13.3.2021 defeated
|
Divina
D’Anna
|
ALP
|
LA (Kimberley)
|
13.3.2021–current
|
Rosetta
Shahanna
|
ALP
|
LC (Mining and Pastoral)
|
22.5.2021–current
|
Tasmania (three parliamentarians) |
Name
|
Party
|
Chamber (Division)
|
Dates in office
|
Andrew
(Paul) Harriss
|
IND; LIB from March 2014
|
LC (Huon)
HA (Franklin)
|
25.5.1996–24.2.2014
30.3.2014–18.2.2016 resigned
|
Kathryn
Hay
|
ALP
|
HA (Bass)
|
20.7.2002–18.3.2006 resigned
|
Jennifer
Houston
|
ALP
|
HA (Bass)
|
3.3.2018–1.5.2021 defeated
|
New South Wales (four
parliamentarians) |
Linda
Burney
|
ALP
|
LA (Canterbury)
|
22.3.2003–6.5.2016 resigned
|
Lynda
Voltz
|
ALP
|
LC
LA (Auburn)
|
24.3.2007–28.2.2019
23.3.2019–current
|
Jai
Rowell
|
LIB
|
LA (Wollondilly)
|
26.3.2011–17.12.2018 resigned
|
Gregory
(Greg) Warren
|
ALP
|
LA (Campbelltown)
|
28.3.2015–current
|
Australian Capital Territory (one
parliamentarian) |
Name
|
Party
|
Chamber (Division)
|
Dates in office
|
Christopher
(Chris) Bourke
|
ALP
|
LA (Ginninderra)
|
2.6.2011–14.10.2016 defeated
|
South Australia (one
parliamentarian) |
Name
|
Party
|
Chamber (Division)
|
Dates in office
|
Kyam Maher
|
ALP
|
LC
|
17.10.2012–current
|
Source: Compiled by the Parliamentary Library.
*By-election.
Note 1: retired parliamentarians are listed as ‘resigned’.