Tarnya Smith Explained

Tarnya Smith
Office:Shadow Minister for Science, Innovation and the Digital Economy
Term Start:6 May 2016
Term End:25 November 2017
Leader:Tim Nicholls
Predecessor:John McVeigh
Office1:Shadow Minister for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander and Multicultural Affairs
Term Start1:14 February 2015
Term End1:6 May 2016
Leader1:Lawrence Springborg
Predecessor1:Desley Scott
Successor1:Fiona Simpson
Office2:Assistant Minister for Child Safety
Term Start2:15 February 2013
Term End2:14 February 2015
Premier2:Campbell Newman
Predecessor2:Rob Molhoek
Successor2:post abolished
Constituency Mp3:Mount Ommaney
Parliament3:Queensland
Term Start3:24 March 2012
Term End3:25 November 2017
Predecessor3:Julie Attwood
Successor3:Jess Pugh
Party:Liberal National
Occupation:Businesswoman
Birth Date:1965 3, df=yes
Birth Place:Sydney, New South Wales, Australia
Spouse:Steve Smith

Tarnya Lisa Smith (born 17 March 1965) is an Australian politician. She was a Liberal National member of the Queensland Legislative Assembly from 2012 to 2017, representing the electorate of Mount Ommaney.[1]

Smith, who had been the candidate for the federal seat of Oxley at the 2010 state election, was elected to the Legislative Assembly at the 2012 state election, defeating new Labor candidate Ben Marczyk. She narrowly retained Mount Ommaney following the 2015 election. The narrow defeat of the Newman Government relegated the LNP to opposition and Smith was promoted to Shadow Cabinet as Shadow Minister for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander and Multicultural Affairs by Lawrence Springborg. Her elevation to Shadow Minister for Science, Innovation and the Digital Economy came with the election of Tim Nicholls as Opposition Leader on 6 May 2015.

Smith's seat of Mount Ommaney was altered by an electoral redistribution for the 2017 state election: her 0.2% majority from the 2015 election, already the narrowest in the state, became a 1.0% Labor margin on the new boundaries, making it a notionally Labor seat. She recontested her seat, but was defeated by Labor candidate Jess Pugh.[2]

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Mount Ommaney - Queensland Votes 2012 - ABC News (Australian Broadcasting Corporation). .
  2. Web site: Electorate: Mount Ommaney . Australian Broadcasting Corporation . Queensland Votes . 26 November 2017.