Raff Ciccone Explained

Honorific-Prefix:Senator
Raff Ciccone
Senator for Victoria
Term Start1:6 March 2019
Predecessor1:Jacinta Collins
Birth Name:Raffaele Ciccone
Birth Date:1 November 1983[1]
Birth Place:Melbourne, Victoria, Australia
Spouse:None
Citizenship:Australian
Party:Labor
Alma Mater:Deakin University
University of Melbourne

Raffaele "Raff" Ciccone (born 1 November 1983) is an Australian politician who is a Senator for Victoria, representing the Australian Labor Party. He was appointed to the Senate on 6 March 2019 following the resignation of Jacinta Collins, becoming the 100th Senator to represent the state of Victoria.

Early life

Ciccone lived with his parents and brother in the Melbourne suburb of Huntingdale. His parents immigrated to Australia from Italy in the 1960s.[2] [3] [4]

He received his education at a local Catholic primary school, Christ Our Holy Redeemer, in Oakleigh East, then at Salesian College in Chadstone.[5] Ciccone went on to study for bachelor's degrees, first in arts, then commerce, from Deakin University and the University of Melbourne.[6] He joined the Labor Party at this time.[7]

Following graduation, Ciccone initially worked in financial planning. Then, he moved to industrial relations and employment law, becoming a senior official in the Shop, Distributive and Allied Employees Association (SDA).[8] The role allowed him to advocate for workers in the retail sector, including fast food, convenience store and warehousing workers. Notably, this included marginalised workers who had been underpaid by 7-Eleven.[9]

Ciccone was elected to the community health board of Link Health and Community in 2009, and from December 2017 served as the organisation's chair.

Politics

Ciccone joined the Australian Labor Party in 2000 and, whilst studying, worked as a research officer to Senator Jacinta Collins. As a party volunteer, he eventually became the vice-president of the Australian Labor Party in Victoria. He was unsuccessful in his first three attempts in elections, at the Monash City Council elections of 2008 and 2016, and on Labor's Senate ticket in Victoria prior to the 2013 federal election.[10] [11] [12] When Senator Collins announced she would not be contesting the seat at the 2019 federal election, it created a casual vacancy and Ciccone put his name forward for the position.

Ciccone was appointed to the Senate on 6 March 2019, taking Collins' place, making him the 100th Senator to represent Victoria.[13] In the 46th Parliament of Australia, he served as Deputy Opposition Whip in the Senate and on the Parliament's Joint Standing Committees on Migration and on Treaties and became Chair of the Senate Select Committee on Temporary Migration.

From 2020 Ciccone has also served on the Joint Standing Committee on Trade and Investment and Growth. Ciccone was the Vice-Chair of the Australia-Italy Parliamentary Country Group.[14] Since 2021, Ciccone has been a member of the Senate Legal and Constitutional Affairs Committee [15] and the Senate Rural and Regional Affairs and Transport Committee. [16]

On 7 August 2020, Ciccone was appointed to the ALP's national executive.[17] [18]

Following the 2022 federal election, Ciccone became Government Deputy Whip in the Senate and was elected Chair of the Senate Foreign Affairs, Defence and Trade Legislation Committee. He was also appointed to the Parliamentary Joint Committee on Intelligence and Security and the Joint Standing Committee on Foreign Affairs, Defence and Trade Committee and Deputy Chair of the Senate Scrutiny of Bills Committee. [19] [20] Ciccone is Chair of the Parliamentary Country Groups for Italy, Switzerland and the United Arab Emirates. He is also the Co-Chair of the Parliamentary Friendship Groups of Fresh Produce; Forestry, Timber and Paper Products; Landcare; and Red Meat.[21] [22]

On 9 April 2022 Ciccone was awarded honorary membership of the Hawthorn branch of the Returned and Services League for advocacy of veterans’ welfare and the establishment of a Royal Commission into Defence and Veteran Suicide.

In an historic first, during the first parliamentary sitting week for 2024, Ciccone became the first father to bring his baby into the Australian Senate chamber. [23]

Political views

Foreign policy

In October 2020 it was reported that Ciccone had joined an informal cross-party grouping of parliamentarians, known as the "Wolverines", who take a hawkish position on China.[24] By 2022, he was known to be a member of the Inter-Parliamentary Alliance on China.[25] Ciccone has argued for Australia’s agriculture industry to be considered to be part of national security.[26] He is one of a handful of Australian parliamentarians who is open in their support for an autonomous, free Taiwan; known to be attending the Presidential inauguration of Lai Ching-te in May 2024.[27]

Environment and energy

Ciccone has strongly supported Australia's timber industry, arguing the industry can help to reduce the country's carbon emissions. He has criticised the Labor government in Victoria for their decision to phase out native forest harvesting by 2030.[28] He is connected to a pro-resources grouping of his party, known as the Otis Group, and has argued against the ALP's opposition to nuclear power in Australia.[29] [30] He has argued that carbon emissions from agriculture should be reduced, requiring collaboration between government and the agricultural industry. Ciccone has criticised climate change activists for arguing that environmental interests and industry interests are opposed.[31]

Industry and industrial relations

Ciccone has advocated stronger penalties against employers committing wage theft, a rise in unemployment benefits and for greater protection of rights for gig workers. He has been a leading supporter of the $15 billion National Reconstruction Fund, directed to value-adding in the production of food and fibre. Speaking at its launch in March 2023, he argued that while COVID-19 had revealed our vulnerability to global supply chains, it also showed Australia's "great potential to improve our domestic capability."[32]

Personal life

Ciccone was married to Dimity Paul, who was once chief of staff to Victorian government minister Adem Somyurek and stood as a Labor candidate at the 2014 state election.[33] [34] Ciccone is a "devoted" supporter of Collingwood Football Club.[35] He owns an investment property in Huntingdale and Oakleigh East.[36]

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Senator Raff Ciccone . . Senators and Members . 29 March 2019.
  2. Web site: Calligeros . Marissa . 2015-05-08 . The faces of Melbourne: which migrants went to which suburbs . 2023-01-20 . The Age . en.
  3. Web site: New Liberal senator uses maiden speech to back Indigenous voice . 2020-11-22 . SBS News . en.
  4. News: Senator Raff Ciccone . Parliament of Australia . 24 March 2021.
  5. Web site: Admin . 2020-09-04 . Senator Raff Ciccone . 2023-01-20 . The Glenferrie Times . en.
  6. News: Board of Directors. Link Health and Community. 6 March 2019.
  7. Web site: 2020-09-04 . Senator Raff Ciccone . 2023-06-21 . The Glenferrie Times . en.
  8. News: Raff Ciccone picks up Jacinta Collins' Senate spot in Victoria. 29 January 2019. 6 March 2019. The Australian.
  9. Web site: Coughlan. Matt. 2019-07-24. Regularly assess welfare: Labor senator. 2020-11-22. The Canberra Times. en-AU.
  10. News: Results for Monash City Council Elections 2008: Oakleigh Ward . Victorian Electoral Commission . 6 March 2019.
  11. News: Monash City Council election results 2016: Mount Waverley Ward . Victorian Electoral Commission . 6 March 2019.
  12. News: 19 July 2013 . Vic Labor at war over Senate, Hotham . Crikey . 6 March 2019.
  13. Web site: 6 March 2019 . Hansard: Legislative Assembly of Victoria . Parliament of Victoria . Refer to pp. 131.
  14. Web site: corporateName=Commonwealth Parliament; address=Parliament House. Canberra. Senator Raff Ciccone. 2020-11-22. www.aph.gov.au. en-AU.
  15. Web site: Senate Standing Committees on Legal and Constitutional Affairs.
  16. Web site: Senate Standing Committees on Rural and Regional Affairs and Transport.
  17. Greg Brown, New Blood for Labor executive, The Australian, Weekend Edition, 8 Aug 2020 p.2 (print only)
  18. Web site: National Executive .
  19. Web site: Senate Standing Committee for the Scrutiny of Bills.
  20. Web site: Senator Raff Ciccone.
  21. Web site: live . Jul 11, 2023 . https://web.archive.org/web/20230711051341/https://www.aph.gov.au/About_Parliament/International_Program/Parliamentary_Networks_and_Country_Groups . . en . 12 August 2023 . Parliamentary Networks and Country Groups .
  22. Web site: live . Jul 11, 2023 . https://web.archive.org/web/20230711051341/https://www.aph.gov.au/about_parliament/parliamentary_friendship . . en . 11 August 2023 . Parliamentary Friends of Forestry, Timber and Paper Products .
  23. News: 9 Feb 2024 . Senator Raff Ciccone becomes first father to bring baby into Senate chamber . Women’s Agenda . 13 March 2024.
  24. Web site: Galloway . Anthony . 2020-10-23 . Seeing Red: Labor's China problem . 2020-11-22 . The Sydney Morning Herald . en.
  25. Web site: Members . Inter-Parliamentary Alliance on China.
  26. Web site: After Covid-19, Vol. 3, Voices from federal parliament . Australian Strategic Policy Institute.
  27. News: 2024-05-15 . China's ominous warnings won't stop Australian MPs attending inauguration for Taiwan's new president . 2024-05-17 . ABC News . en-AU.
  28. Web site: Harris . Rob . 2021-11-23 . Labor senator warns party about reacting to climate 'extremists' . 2023-01-20 . The Sydney Morning Herald . en.
  29. News: Workman . Alice . 10 December 2020 . Follow the leader? Not all Labor MPs get it Right . The Australian . 10 December 2020.
  30. News: Brown . Greg . 18 February 2021 . Labor senators back anti-nuclear energy rethink=The Australian .
  31. Sen. Raff Ciccone, Agriculture and forestry have big role to play in climate-friendly future, Ararat Advocate, Ararat, 2 December 2022 p.11 (print only)
  32. Web site: Bradley . Stefan . 2023-05-03 . Comment: Labor senator Raff Ciccone on the National Reconstruction Fund . 2023-06-21 . Gippsland Times . en-US.
  33. News: 23 May 2015 . Minister stood down over allegations of misconduct made by chief of staff . . 6 March 2019.
  34. News: O'Sullivan . Sascha . 30 January 2019 . Raff Ciccone picks up Jacinta Collins’ Senate spot in Victoria . The Australian . 21 June 2023.
  35. Web site: Towell . Samantha Hutchinson, Noel . 2022-03-29 . Words fail ScoMo as Heloise Pratt lavishes praise . 2023-06-21 . The Sydney Morning Herald . en.
  36. Web site: The private interests of Senator Raff Ciccone . 2024-05-09 . openpolitics.au . en.