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Alannah MacTiernan

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Preceded by
  
Stephen Smith

Succeeded by
  
Tony Buti

Resigned
  
November 21, 1996

Preceded by
  
Kay Hallahan

Party
  
Australian Labor Party

Succeeded by
  
John Carey

Name
  
Alannah MacTiernan

Preceded by
  
Nick Catania

Preceded by
  
Kay Hallahan


Alannah MacTiernan Alannah MacTiernan ABC News Australian Broadcasting

Role
  
Member of the Western Australian Legislative Assembly

Education
  
University of Western Australia

Previous office
  
Member of the Western Australian Legislative Council (1993–1996)

Office
  
Member of the Western Australian Legislative Assembly since 1996

Profiles

Alannah mactiernan mhr abbott s bad choices and wrong priorities


Alannah Joan Geraldine Cecilia MacTiernan (born 10 January 1953 in East Melbourne, Victoria) is an Australian politician. A member of the Australian Labor Party, she was elected to the Western Australian Legislative Council in 1993 until moving to the Legislative Assembly in 1996, where she served as a senior minister in the Gallop state Labor government. She resigned from state politics in July 2010 in an unsuccessful attempt to win the federal seat of Canning at the 2010 federal election, where she then moved to local politics as the mayor of the City of Vincent from 2011 to 2013. She was elected to the federal seat of Perth at the 2013 federal election, though did not contest the seat at the 2016 federal election. She returned to Western Australian state politics at the 2017 state election as a Legislative Council member for the North Metropolitan region.

Contents

Alannah MacTiernan Federal Labor MP Alannah MacTiernan ABC News Australian

Alannah mactiernan mhr labor delivers infrastructure for wa


Political career

Alannah MacTiernan Tilt at top job tempts Alannah MacTiernan Perth Now

Alannah MacTiernan studied at the University of Western Australia where she completed an arts degree and a law degree. She started her career with the federal government, in the area of Aboriginal employment and training. She was elected to the Perth City Council in 1988, where she remained until 1994. In 1993, she was elected as the member for the East Metropolitan region in the Western Australian Legislative Council.

Alannah MacTiernan httpspbstwimgcomprofileimages3788000000993

She was Minister for Planning and Infrastructure in the West Australian government from 2001 to 2008. During that time she established the Public Transport Authority (Western Australia) which helped to transform the planning and management of public transport, particularly in Perth. Her period in office saw the construction of many railway and road projects, including the building of the 70-kilometre-long Mandurah Line (including a tunnel under central Perth), the extensions of the Joondalup Line, Mitchell Freeway, and the Roe and Tonkin Highways, as well as the Kwinana Freeway/Forrest Highway extensions.

In early 2010, she announced her plans to contest the Liberal-held federal seat of Canning, which included her state seat, and on 26 February 2010 resigned from the shadow ministry.

She officially resigned from state parliament on 19 July 2010, two days after prime minister Julia Gillard had announced the timetable for the 2010 federal election. Despite particularly strong results in areas which she had previously represented, MacTiernan came up short of victory, only garnering a 2.16 percent swing—three points short of what she needed to take the seat from Llberal incumbent Don Randall. She was elected as the mayor of the City of Vincent in October 2011.

After Stephen Smith revealed that he was going to retire as member for the federal electorate of Perth at the 2013 federal election, MacTiernan announced her intention to contest the seat for the ALP, and the only other candidate for Labor pre-selection Matthew Keogh withdrew his nomination. At the election on 7 September, MacTiernan was successful in winning the seat despite a 1.5% swing against her.

In July 2014 it was reported that a UMR "robo-poll" of 23 federal electorates, conducted for the National Tertiary Education Union, had found that MacTiernan was the second most popular federal MP, with an approval rating among her own constituents of 30 per cent.

MacTiernan announced in February 2016 that she would not be contesting her seat at the 2016 federal election. She was succeeded by Labor's Tim Hammond.

In August 2016 MacTiernan announced she would return to Western Australian state politics, and was placed as WA Labor's first candidate for the North Metropolitan electoral region. The landslide victory for WA Labor at the 2017 state election ensured her return to the Legislative Council.

References

Alannah MacTiernan Wikipedia