Samantha Ratnam Explained

Samantha Ratnam
Honorific-Suffix:MLC
Office1:Leader of the Victorian Greens
Term Start1:12 October 2017
Term End1:23 April 2024
Deputy1:Nina Springle (2017–2018)
Ellen Sandell (2018–2024)
Predecessor1:Greg Barber
Successor1:Ellen Sandell
Office2:Member of the Victorian Legislative Council
Term Start2:19 October 2017
Predecessor2:Greg Barber
Constituency2:Northern Metropolitan Region
Office3:15th Mayor of Moreland
Term Start3:November 2015
Term End3:November 2016
Predecessor3:Meghan Hopper
Successor3:Helen Davidson
Office4:Councillor of the City of Moreland
for South Ward
Term Start4:1 October 2012
Term End4:11 October 2017
Predecessor4:Josephine Connellan
Successor4:Jess Dorney
Birth Date:[1]
Birth Place:England, United Kingdom
Nationality:Australian
Residence:Brunswick East, Melbourne, Victoria[2]
Children:1
Spouse:Colin Jacobs
Alma Mater:University of Melbourne
Education:Mullauna College[3]
Signature:Samantha Ratnam signature 2023.svg

Samantha Shantini Ratnam (Tamil: சமந்தா இரத்தினம்; born 1977) is a British-Australian social worker and politician. She was the leader of the Victorian Greens between 2017 and 2024, serving as a member of the Victorian Legislative Council in the Northern Metropolitan Region. Prior to this she was a councillor and mayor for the City of Moreland.

Early life

Born in England and raised in Sri Lanka,[4] Samantha Ratnam and her family left the country after the 'Black July' 1983 riots in Colombo that gave rise to 30-year Sri Lankan Civil War between the government and Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam, a Tamil separatist group. The family eventually settled in Australia after spending time in Europe and Canada.[5]

From 1995 to 2001 Samantha Ratnam completed a Bachelor of Arts and a Bachelor of Social Work (Honours) from the University of Melbourne. In 2014, she completed her Doctor of Philosophy, titled 'Young people and global citizenship: New possibilities for civic participation', also from the University of Melbourne.[6]

Ratnam has worked in various roles in assisting migrants and asylum seekers including at the Asylum Seeker Resource Centre, in the fields of drug and alcohol rehabilitation, mental health and international development.

In April 2014, Samantha Ratnam explained in The Indian Sun, an online publication for the Australian-Indian community how she is a product of diaspora and her motivations for entering politics.[7]

Political career

Moreland City Council

Ratnam first stood for and was elected to the City of Moreland (now City of Merri-bek) Council for South Ward in 2012. In 2016, she was re-elected with her vote more than doubling to 50.71%.[8]

In 2015 she was elected by councillors as the first Greens mayor of Moreland for 2016 in a 6 to 5 vote with Independent Councillor Helen Davidson and Socialist Alliance Councillor Sue Bolton supporting her bid for the mayor. Her election as Mayor was even noted in the country of her heritage, Sri Lanka,[9] and by the Indian community in Australia,[10] and in Tamil culture.[11]

In her time on the council, Ratnam was instrumental in removing official council references to Australia Day, saying “this is a gesture of respect and an important step in healing”.[12] Ratnam resigned from the council on 11 October 2017.[13]

2016 federal election

Ahead of the 2016 federal election the Greens preselected Ratnam to stand in the Division of Wills, where the sitting Labor MP Kelvin Thomson was retiring.[14]

Although Ratnam substantially increased the Greens vote with a swing greater than 10 percentage points in Wills, the Labor candidate Peter Khalil won the seat with a 4.88 point margin.[15] [16]

State politics

Ratnam filled the vacant Legislative Council seat of former Victorian Greens leader Greg Barber, who announced his retirement from politics on 28 September 2017.[17] On 12 October 2017, prior to having officially filled Barber's seat, Ratnam was appointed as leader of the Victorian Greens, becoming the first woman to lead the party at a state level.[18] [19] She was officially sworn in as a member of the Legislative Council on 19 October 2017.[20]

Ratnam was re-elected in the Northern Metropolitan region at the 2018 state election, though her four party colleagues failed to win back their seats and she became the only Greens member of the Legislative Council.[21]

Tenure

During her time in state politics, Ratnam has established parliamentary inquiries into the growing threat of far-right extremism (2022),[22] the biodiversity extinction crisis (2019),[23] and the waste and recycling crisis (2019).[24]

According to The Age, between November 2018 and November 2021, Ratnam voted with the Andrews Government's position 62.4% of the time, the fourth-most of any Legislative Council crossbencher.[25]

In 2023, Ratnam threatened to block a proposal by the Labor Party in Victoria to increase housing supply unless half of all new developments were either affordable housing or public housing.[26] At the time, South Australia required that 15% of all new development were affordable housing, of which 5% were for the highest-need groups. She said that for the Greens to support reforms to increase housing supply, "the reforms must demonstrate that they meaningfully address housing affordability, and are not merely a free ride for the property industry." Ratnam also called for a two-year rent freeze.

Upcoming federal election

In April 2024 Ratnam announced her intention to run for Greens preselection for the federal seat of Wills. After preselection was completed Ratnam was announced as the Greens candidate for Wills.

Academic research

As a social work PhD student, Ratnam contributed to a number of peer-reviewed research papers and academic books, including:

External links

Notes and References

  1. News: Kolovos . Benita . 13 November 2022 . Samantha Ratnam, the march of the Greens and the unfulfilled promise of the 'most progressive government' ever . .
  2. News: Fyfe . Melissa . 16 November 2022 . She's a safe pair of hands, but Greens leader needs her 'Google it, mate' moment . The Age .
  3. Web site: Samantha Ratnam – Inaugural Speech . 1 November 2017 . hansard.parliament.vic.gov.au . .
  4. News: Kandiah. Shanelle. Meet the Mayor of Moreland, Australia: Samantha Ratnam. 12 October 2017. Tamil Culture. 22 March 2016.
  5. Web site: Reynolds . Peter . Moreland Council elects first Green mayor Samantha Ratnam . Moreland Leader/Herald Sun. 30 October 2015 . 27 September 2016.
  6. Web site: Young people and global citizenship: new possibilities for civic participation . 2021-06-16 . Minerva Access. 11343/52650 .
  7. Web site: Kallivayalil . Tanu . Taking a Stand . The Indian Sun . 24 April 2014. 29 September 2016.
  8. News: Choahan . Neelima . Greens vote surges in Victorian council elections . The Age . 23 October 2016. 23 October 2016.
  9. Web site: Lankan born woman elected Mayor of Australian city . Weekend Nation (Sri Lanka) . 30 October 2015. 29 September 2016.
  10. Web site: Samanta Ratnam – New Mayor for Moreland City Council . India2Australia . 27 October 2015. 29 September 2016.
  11. Web site: Kandiah . Shanelle . Meet the Mayor of Moreland, Australia: Samantha Ratnam . TamilCulture . 22 March 2016. 29 September 2016.
  12. Web site: Moreland City Council keeps citizenship ceremony, dumps Australia Day. The Age (Fairfax Media). 13 September 2017.
  13. Web site: Greens councillor Samantha Ratnam resigns from Moreland Council ahead of taking up position in Victorian parliament. Herald Sun. 11 October 2017.
  14. Web site: Willingham . Richard . Greens enlist Moreland mayor for assault on Wills . The Age . 30 January 2016. 27 September 2016.
  15. Web site: Wills, Vic. AEC Tallyroom . Australian Electoral Commission . 22 July 2016. 27 September 2016.
  16. Web site: Heath . Tamara . Labor's Peter Khalil claims Wills, but Samantha Ratnam and the Greens the big winners . Moreland Leader/Herald Sun . 4 July 2016. 27 September 2016.
  17. Web site: Victorian Greens leader Greg Barber quits Parliament. . 28 September 2017.
  18. Web site: Victorian Greens appoint Samantha Ratnam to replace Greg Barber as state leader. ABC News. 12 October 2017.
  19. Web site: Greens name ex-mayor of Moreland as party leader before she even takes her seat. The Age (Fairfax Media). 12 October 2017.
  20. Web site: New MLC sworn in; Dr. Samantha Ratnam. Parliament of Victoria. 19 October 2017.
  21. Web site: Victorian election Upper House calculation results confirm Labor, crossbench domination. ABC News. 11 December 2018.
  22. Web site: Far-right threat under spotlight as Andrews government backs probe . 30 November 2021 .
  23. Web site: Victorian government pressed to deliver promised funding for threatened plants and animals . . 2 December 2021 .
  24. Web site: Victorian parliamentary inquiry into 'waste crisis' - Waste Management Review Victorian parliamentary inquiry into 'waste crisis' . 8 March 2019 .
  25. Web site: Sakkal . Paul . 'Is this what compliant looks like?': Victoria's crossbench conflict . The Age . 26 November 2021 . Fairfax Media . 1 December 2021.
  26. News: Kolovos . Benita . 2023-06-16 . Victorian Greens threaten to block planning changes unless housing demands met . en-GB . The Guardian . 0261-3077.