Members of the New South Wales Legislative Council who served in the 54th Parliament were elected at the 2003 and 2007 elections. As members serve eight-year terms, half of the Council was elected in 2003 and did not face re-election in 2007, and the members elected in 2007 did not face re-election until 2011.[1][2] The President was Meredith Burgmann.[3]
- ^ a b David Oldfield resigned from One Nation NSW, a splinter party he had founded during the previous term after his expulsion from One Nation, on 28 December 2004, and served out the remainder of his term as an independent.
- ^ a b c Outdoor Recreation Party MLC Malcolm Jones resigned on 23 September 2003, pre-empting an expulsion motion as a result of criminal charges he was facing for misusing his parliamentary entitlements. Jon Jenkins was appointed to the vacancy on 29 October.
- ^ a b c Labor MLC Tony Burke resigned on 24 June 2004 to contest the House of Representatives seat of Watson at the 2004 federal election. Eric Roozendaal was appointed to the vacancy on 28 June.
- ^ a b Christian Democratic Party MLC Fred Nile resigned on 30 August 2004 to contest a seat in the Australian Senate at the 2004 federal election. The party initially nominated Ross Clifford as his replacement, but later decided to renominate Nile to his own vacancy on 21 October after he failed in his Senate bid.
- ^ a b c Labor MLC Michael Egan resigned in January 2005. Greg Donnelly was appointed to the vacancy on 23 February.
- ^ a b c Labor MLC Carmel Tebbutt resigned on 26 August 2005 in order to contest a by-election in the Legislative Assembly seat of Marrickville. Penny Sharpe was appointed to the vacancy on 30 September.
- ^ a b c Shooters Party MLC John Tingle resigned on 2 May 2006 due to health issues. Robert Brown was appointed to the vacancy on 3 May.
- ^ a b Peter Breen was elected on the ticket of the Reform the Legal System microparty, which subsequently morphed into the Human Rights Party. He defected to the Labor Party on 6 May 2006, but was forced to resign from the party on 18 July after making controversial comments about a convicted murderer. Breen subsequently returned to the Human Rights Party.
- ^ a b c Liberal MLC Patricia Forsythe resigned on 13 September 2006 after losing Liberal preselection to recontest her seat at the 2007 election. Matthew Mason-Cox, who had defeated her for preselection, was appointed to the vacancy on 28 September.
- ^ a b Outdoor Recreation Party MLC Jon Jenkins resigned on 16 February 2007. The party did not nominate a replacement due to the close proximity of the 2007 state election.
- ^ The changes to the composition of the council, in chronological order, were Oldfield sat as an independent,[a] Jones resigned,[b] Burke resigned,[c] Nile resigned,[d] Egan resigned,[e] Tebbutt resigned,[f] Tingle resigned,[g] Breen briefly defected to Labor,[h] Forsythe resigned,[i] and Jenkins resigned.[j]
References
edit- ^ "Former members of the New South Wales Parliament". New South Wales Parliament. Retrieved 28 May 2020.
- ^ "Part 3 Members of the Legislative Council" (PDF). New South Wales Parliamentary Record. Parliament of New South Wales. Retrieved 28 May 2020.
- ^ "Part Ten - Officers of Parliament" (PDF). NSW Parliamentary Record. Parliament of New South Wales. Retrieved 28 May 2020.[k]