Tripti Joshi (Editor)

Alan Hunt (politician)

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Full Name
  
Alan John Hunt

Name
  
Alan Hunt

Nationality
  
Australian

Role
  
Australian Politician


Political party
  
Liberal Party

Profession
  
Solicitor

Resigned
  
October 2, 1992

Alan Hunt (politician) wwwparliamentvicgovauimagesmembersbioreghu

Born
  
9 October 1927 Peterborough, South Australia (
1927-10-09
)

Other political affiliations
  
Liberal and Country Party

Alma mater
  
University of Melbourne

Died
  
July 19, 2013, Frankston, Melbourne, Australia

Party
  
Liberal Party of Australia

Children
  
Greg Hunt, Bob Hunt, Peter Hunt, Steven Hunt, John Hunt

Books
  
Working with Government: A Handbook

Education
  
University of Melbourne

Alan John Hunt AM (9 October 1927 – 19 July 2013) was an Australian politician, having been a member of the Victorian Legislative Council from 1961 until 1992.

Hunt started his education in South Australia and later attended Melbourne Grammar School. He then went to the University of Melbourne where he was a non-resident law student at Trinity College. He was president of the Melbourne University Liberals from 1948–50 and secretary of the then National Union of Australian University Students. After obtaining a law degree he practised as a solicitor until entering the Legislative Council in 1961, representing the Liberal Party.

Hunt was first appointed as a minister in 1971, under the premiership of Henry Bolte. He served in a variety of portfolios under the Bolte, Hamer and Thompson governments, most notability as Minister for Local Government, Minister for Planning and Minister for Education.

From 1979 to 1982 the Hamer government initiated and implemented the most significant and far-reaching reorganisation of the Victorian Education Department in the 20th Century.[1] Hunt as Minister of Education (1979 – 1982) and Norman Lacy as Assistant Minister of Education (1979 – 1980) were jointly responsible for the reform policy development process and the early stages of its implementation. Together they made a formidable team in the pursuit of their mission to reform the administration of the centralised and inefficient Department. Hunt appointed Lacy Chairman of the Ministerial Consultative Committee that steered the project in its early phase and the Implementation Steering Committee later. He pulled together an impressive group of people from academia and business to assist him as well as PA Management Consultants. The Government legislated - at the end of 1981 - to scrap the teaching divisions (Primary, Secondary and Technical) and to remove the statutory bodies (The Committee of Classifiers and the Teachers’ Tribunal).[2]

Alan Hunt also served as leader of the government in the Legislative Council from 1978 until the Liberals lost government in 1982.

He retired from politics in 1992 and is the father of current Federal Liberal parliamentarian Greg Hunt.

References

Alan Hunt (politician) Wikipedia


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