Leesa Vlahos Explained

Leesa Vlahos
Constituency Mp:Taylor
Parliament:South Australian
Predecessor:Trish White
Successor:Jon Gee
Term Start:20 March 2010
Term End:17 March 2018
Party:Australian Labor Party (SA)
Birthname:Leesa Anne Chesser
Birth Place:Townsville, Queensland, Australia

Leesa Anne Vlahos, née Chesser[1] (born 1966) is a former Australian politician. She represented the South Australian House of Assembly seat of Taylor for the Labor Party from the 2010 election until her retirement in 2018.[2]

Background

Vlahos was born in Townsville, Queensland. As a child she became a Girl Guide and later continued to be involved with the scouting movement. She studied Health Administration at the Queensland University of Technology. She then worked in public and private hospitals in Brisbane and later the Repatriation Hospital in Daw Park, South Australia. Vlahos was the founding director of SA Progressive Business Inc. which acts as Labor's corporate events arm which links them with the business community.[3]

Parliament

Vlahos was elected to the seat of Taylor after the retirement of the previous Labor member Trish White.[4]

She is a former Presiding Officer of the SA Parliament Public Works Committee, a former member of the Aboriginal Lands Parliamentary Standing Committee, and a former member of the Parliamentary Committee on Occupational Safety, Rehabilitation and Compensation. She was also a member of the Economic and Finance Committee.

She previously held offices as Parliamentary Secretary to the Minister for Health, the Parliamentary Secretary to the Premier and assisted in the portfolio areas of Defence Industries, Veterans’ Affairs, Health, Mental Health and Substance Abuse and The Arts.

Vlahos was described by the Australian Financial Review as 'staunchly pro-nuclear' and advocated for nuclear power in Australia at the time that the Nuclear Fuel Cycle Royal Commission commenced in March 2015. She is aligned with Labor's right faction.[5] In a submission in response to the setting of the Commission's Terms of Reference she stated that "for years I have been an advocate for a modern and safe nuclear industry in our State."[6]

Oakden Scandal

At the 2018 election, Vlahos would have been Labor's first-listed candidate on their upper house ticket,[7] but she quit before the publication of the ICAC report into the Oakden scandal.

Cabinet

Vlahos' elevation to the Cabinet of South Australia in the Jay Weatherill government occurred in January 2016.[8] [9]

Vlahos represented the following portfolios in the Cabinet of South Australia:[10]

She resigned from Cabinet on 17 September 2017 for personal health reasons, but announced that she intended to remain in the House of Assembly until the March 2018 election[11]

Post Parliamentary Career

After leaving parliament, Leesa became a board member for the following organisations:

During 2022 she joined the Salzburg Global Seminar as part of the "Health and Economic Well-being: Gender Equity in Post-Pandemic Rebuilding" program[17]

References

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Notes and References

  1. Web site: Leesa Vlahos MP on Twitter. Twitter.
  2. 4336. Leesa Anne Vlahos. yes. 19 December 2022.
  3. Web site: Leesa Vlahos. 2015-03-17. South Australian Labor.
  4. Web site: Home - Electoral Commission SA. ecsa.sa.gov.au.
  5. News: Labor MP Leesa Vlahos says pro-nuclear debate 'getting easier'. Evans. Simon. 2015-03-16. 2015-03-17. Australian Financial Review.
  6. Web site: Royal Commission into Nuclear Industry. Vlahos. Leesa. 2015-02-15. 2018-02-16.
  7. News: Labor Upper House MLC John Gazzola to retire from politics at next election . . 2017-02-14.
  8. News: 2016-01-18 . Malinauskas, Vlahos confirmed as new members of SA Labor ministry . en-AU . ABC News . 2022-12-19.
  9. News: Reshuffle, Peter Malinauskas and Leesa Vlahos join Jay Weatherill's Cabinet . . 2016-01-18.
  10. Web site: Cabinet of South Australia . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20150921063339/http://www.premier.sa.gov.au/index.php/ministers . 2015-09-21 . 2022-12-19 . Premier.sa.gov.au.
  11. News: Vlahos Quits . . Michael . McGuire . Daniel . Wills . 15 September 2017 . .
  12. Web site: APA Board welcomes new directors . Australian Physiotherapy Association . 17 December 2023.
  13. Web site: Neami welcomes new and diverse Board Directors . neami national.
  14. Web site: McLaren . Helen . Now is the time to Create a more Compassionate World Post-COVID . diversity rewired . 17 December 2023.
  15. Web site: Inaugural Future Director Award chooses six finalists for 2022 . Future Directors.
  16. Web site: Inaugural Future Director Award chooses six finalists for 2022 . Future Directors.
  17. Web site: Health and Economic Well-being: Gender Equity in Post-Pandemic Rebuilding . Salzburg Global . 17 December 2023.