Andrew Stoner Explained

Honorific-Prefix:The Honourable
Andrew Stoner
Order:16th Deputy Premier of New South Wales
Term Start:28 March 2011
Term End:17 October 2014
Premier:Barry O'Farrell
Mike Baird
Predecessor:Carmel Tebbutt
Successor:Troy Grant
Constituency:Oxley
Order1:Leader of the New South Wales National Party
Term Start1:31 March 2003
Term End1:17 October 2014
Deputy1:Don Page (2003–07)
Andrew Fraser (2007–08)
Adrian Piccoli (2008–14)
Predecessor1:George Souris
Successor1:Troy Grant
Order2:Minister for Trade and Investment
Premier2:Barry O'Farrell
Mike Baird
Term Start2:3 April 2011
Term End2:17 October 2014
Successor2:Troy Grant
Order3:Minister for Regional Infrastructure and Services
Premier3:Barry O'Farrell
Mike Baird
Term Start3:3 April 2011
Term End3:17 October 2014
Successor3:Troy Grant
Order4:Minister for the North Coast
Predecessor4:Don Page
Successor4:Duncan Gay
Term Start4:23 April 2014
Term End4:17 October 2014
Order7:Member of the New South Wales Legislative Assembly for Oxley
Term Start7:27 March 1999
Term End7:6 March 2015
Predecessor7:Bruce Jeffery
Successor7:Melinda Pavey
Birth Date:1960 1, df=yes
Birth Place:Brisbane, Queensland
Birthname:Andrew John Stoner
Nationality:Australian
Party:National Party
Occupation:Politician
Footnotes:[1] [2]

Andrew John Stoner (born 14 January 1960), an Australian former politician, was a member of the New South Wales Legislative Assembly representing Oxley from 1999 state election to 2015.[3]

Stoner was the Leader of the New South Wales National Party from 2003 to 2014, and Deputy Premier of New South Wales from 2011 to 2014.[4] He was the Minister for Trade and Investment, and Minister for Regional Infrastructure and Services, between 2011 and 2014; and the Minister for Tourism and Major Events, the Minister for Small Business, and the Minister for the North Coast, between April and October 2014 in the Baird government.[5]

Biography

Stoner was born in 1960 in Brisbane, Queensland, before his family moved to Wauchope, New South Wales. He attended the Queensland Institute of Technology from 1979 to 1985, receiving a Bachelor of Business, and later James Cook University of North Queensland in 1993, receiving a Master of Business Administration with first class honours. He became an employment agency manager and a regional manager in the Australian Public Service before entering parliament.[6]

Stoner joined the National Party of Australia and was elected to the New South Wales Legislative Assembly on 27 March 1999 for Oxley. He was appointed the National Party Deputy Whip in his first term in office and rose to become Shadow Minister for Emergency Services and Shadow Minister for Sport and Recreation from 2002 to 2003. However, after the Liberal-National Coalition lost the 2003 election, the then Nationals leader George Souris stood aside and Stoner was elected in his place.[7]

Stoner helped lead the Coalition to a landslide victory in the 2011 state election. The Liberals won a majority in their own right (51 seats)--the first time that the main non-Labor party in New South Wales had won an outright majority under the Liberal banner. Although O'Farrell could have theoretically governed alone, he chose to retain the coalition with the Nationals. In a departure from normal practice, O'Farrell and Stoner were sworn in as an interim two-man government on 28 March even though counting was still underway.[8]

In a 2013 interview marking his ten - year anniversary as leader of the Nationals, Stoner reflected that:[9]

Owing to the resignation of Barry O'Farrell as Premier,[10] and the subsequent ministerial reshuffle by Mike Baird,[5] in April 2014 in addition to his existing responsibilities as a minister, Stoner was appointed as the Minister for Tourism and Major Events, as the Minister for Small Business, and as the Minister for the North Coast.[3] [11]

In the same reshuffle Premier Baird acceded to Stoner's request to dump his predecessor as Nationals leader George Souris from Cabinet, a request that was revealed when Souris announced his retirement from politics later in 2014 on 27 September.[12]

On 15 October, Stoner stood down as National Party leader and as deputy premier, citing family reasons. He also announced he would retire from politics at the next election.[13] Troy Grant was elected unopposed as his successor.[4]

Stoner is now a company director, consultant and adviser to several companies.

Personal life

A keen surfer and father of six, Stoner now resides in Port Macquarie on the Mid North Coast. He separated from his former wife in 2016, divorced in 2019 and was remarried in 2020, to Dr Caroline Hong, a dentist. Stoner and his wife are now part of a Multi Level Marketing Company called "Three International".

See also

References

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Notes and References

  1. Web site: Inaugural Speech: Mr Andrew Stoner . Hansard: Legislative Assembly . Parliament of New South Wales . 2 June 1999 . 28 December 2011 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20120328100228/http://www.parliament.nsw.gov.au/prod/parlment/hansart.nsf/V3Key/LA19990602045?open&refNavID=HA8_1 . 28 March 2012 .
  2. Web site: Rehn. Alison. Andrew Stoner, Alexander Downer & Julia Gillard in Facebook folly. . Australia . 26 April 2011. 12 August 2008.
  3. The Hon. Andrew John Stoner (1960-) . 2148 . Yes . 18 September 2019.
  4. News: Gerathy. Sarah. Troy Grant replaces Andrew Stoner as NSW Deputy Premier. 16 October 2014. ABC News. 16 October 2014.
  5. News: Mike Baird's cabinet reshuffle a preparation for next election . . 22 April 2014 . 24 April 2014 . Nicholls, Sean .
  6. Web site: Andrew Stoner . National Party of Australia – NSW . 2007-02-25 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20080718171831/http://www.nsw.nationals.org.au/electorate/state/oxley.aspx . 18 July 2008 .
  7. Web site: Reference at www.nsw.nationals.org.au.
  8. News: Will Jeff Seeney be the Next Premier of Queensland?. Green. Antony. Antony Green. ABC News. 17 March 2012. 23 March 2012.
  9. News: Stoner marks 10 years at the top . . 11 April 2013 . Luke, Julian . 26 April 2014 .
  10. News: Barry O'Farrell quits as NSW Premier over memory fail . 16 April 2014 . . 23 April 2014 .
  11. News: Mike Baird's NSW cabinet . 22 April 2014 . . 23 April 2014 .
  12. Web site: George Souris to retire from NSW Parliament. 27 September 2014.
  13. News: Gerathy. Sarah. Andrew Stoner resigns as NSW Deputy Premier and Nationals leader; will also retire at next election. 15 October 2014. ABC News. 16 October 2014.