Ross Free Explained

Honorific-Prefix:The Honourable
Ross Free
Constituency Mp1:Macquarie
Parliament1:Australian
Predecessor1:Reg Gillard
Successor1:Alasdair Webster
Term Start1:18 October 1980
Term End1:1 December 1984
Constituency Mp2:Lindsay
Parliament2:Australian
Predecessor2:New seat
Successor2:Jackie Kelly
Term Start2:1 December 1984
Term End2:2 March 1996
Birth Date:1943 3, df=yes
Birth Place:Bathurst, New South Wales
Nationality:Australian
Party:Australian Labor Party
Residence:Blue Mountains
Alma Mater:University of Sydney
Occupation:Politician, Teacher

Ross Vincent Free (born 7 March 1943) is a former Australian politician who served as a Labor member of the Australian House of Representatives representing the seat of Macquarie from 1980 until 1984, then Lindsay from 1984 until 1996.[1] He served as a minister from 1990 until 1996 in both the Hawke and Keating ministries.

Biography

Free was born in Bathurst, New South Wales, and completed a Bachelor of Science (Honours) and Graduate Diploma of Education at the University of Sydney, following which he worked as a school teacher.[2]

Free won Labor preselection for the outer Sydney federal seat of Macquarie ahead of the 1980 election, and defeated the incumbent Liberal member Reg Gillard.[3] He served as a member of several house standing parliamentary committees, in opposition and then in government upon Hawke winning the prime ministership in 1983. When a redistribution ahead of the 1984 election erased most of his majority in Macquarie, he transferred to the newly created seat of Lindsay, based around Penrith. In 1985 he led a delegation to the European Parliamentary Institutions in Strasbourg and Berlin, and again in Germany in 1986.[2]

After the 1990 election, at which Hawke won a fourth term, Free was appointed Parliamentary Secretary to the Prime Minister in the Fourth Hawke Ministry.[2]

Following Paul Keating's first, and unsuccessful, challenge for the leadership in June 1991, a number of changes were made to the ministry, with Free being promoted to Minister for Science and Technology and Minister Assisting the Prime Minister on Science. Hawke was ultimately defeated in a second challenge on 20 December 1991, and Free continued in the First Keating Ministry in the same portfolios. After the 1993 election, he served in the Second Keating Ministry as Minister for Schools, Vocational Education and Training.[2]

He was one of several ministers to lose his seat at the 1996 election, at which John Howard became Prime Minister. Free went into the election sitting on a seemingly daunting margin of 10.2 percent, but lost Lindsay to Liberal candidate Jackie Kelly on a swing of almost 12 percent—one of 13 Labor MPs from New South Wales to lose his seat. Kelly was subsequently found to have run while still a serving RAAF officer, and both contested the resulting by-election (as did 10 other candidates), but Free lost by a greater margin.[4]

Publications

Notes and References

  1. Book: Handbook of the 42nd Parliament. Parliament of Australia. 30 September 2008. 22 January 2010. 459.
  2. Web site: Biography for Free, the Hon. Ross Vincent. Parliament of Australia. 25 January 2010 .
  3. Web site: Psephos: Commonwealth of Australia — Legislative Election of 18 October 1980. Adam Carr. 22 January 2010.
  4. Web site: Lindsay (NSW) By-Election (19 October 1996). Australian Electoral Commission. Australian Electoral Commission. 3 August 2007. 22 January 2010.