Nisha Rathode (Editor)

Alex Douglas (politician)

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Preceded by
  
Robert Poole

Succeeded by
  
Phil Gray

Name
  
Alex Douglas

Profession
  
Doctor

Preceded by
  
Phil Gray


Alex Douglas (politician) httpswwwparliamentqldgovaudocumentsmember

Born
  
24 November 1958 (age 65) Brisbane, Queensland (
1958-11-24
)

Relations
  
John Douglas (great-grandfather) Henry Douglas (grandfather)

Role
  
Member of the Queensland Legislative Assembly

Previous office
  
Member of the Queensland Legislative Assembly (2006–2006)

Office
  
Member of the Queensland Legislative Assembly since 2009

Political party
  
National Party of Australia, Liberal National Party of Queensland, Palmer United Party

Alexander Rodney "Alex" Douglas (born 24 November 1958) is an Australian politician. He was a National Party of Australia member of the Queensland Legislative Assembly from April to September 2006, representing the electorate of Gaven. He was elected for the same seat as a Liberal National Party member in 2009, and re-elected in 2012.

Contents

Alex Douglas (politician) cdnnewsapicomauimagev144dbef6dcc2b5fe9b1461f

In late 2012, he left the Liberal National Party to sit as an independent, and subsequently joined the United Australia Party, rebranded as the Palmer United Party (PUP), in June 2013, serving as its state leader. He resigned from the Palmer United Party in August 2014 and again sat as an independent for the final months of his term, but was defeated at the 2015 state election.

Family and early career

Born in Brisbane, Douglas comes from a political family: his great-grandfather was John Douglas, Premier of Queensland from 1877 to 1879, and his grandfather was Henry Douglas, member for Cook from 1907 to 1915. Douglas is related to the current (12th) Marquess of Queensberry. His uncle is federal MP Bob Katter.

Educated at St Joseph's College, Gregory Terrace, and the University of Queensland, Douglas was a general practitioner and medical officer before entering parliament, and was deputy chair of the Queensland Division of General Practice. He was also on the Central Council of the National Party.

Political career

In April 2006, Douglas was elected to the Legislative Assembly of Queensland in a by-election for the previously Labor-held seat of Gaven, representing the National Party. He was appointed Deputy Opposition Whip in August, but at the 2006 state election in September he was defeated by Labor candidate Phil Gray, the same candidate he had defeated earlier that year. Douglas contested the 2007 federal election as the National Party candidate for Fadden, but was defeated by the Liberal candidate Stuart Robert.

The 2009 state election saw Douglas pitted against Gray for the third consecutive time. On this occasion, Douglas, running under the banner of the newly formed Liberal National Party, narrowly emerged as the victor, reclaiming his old seat of Gaven.

On 16 June 2011, Douglas was appointed as the first non-government chair of the Parliamentary Crime and Misconduct Committee.

On 29 November 2012, following a dispute with LNP Premier Campbell Newman over his removal from membership of parliamentary committees, Douglas resigned from the LNP to sit as an independent.

On 30 April 2013, he joined the newly created United Australia Party, and became the Queensland leader of the party (quickly renamed the Palmer United Party) in June 2013.

Douglas resigned as leader in August 2014 to protest against his lack of involvement in the preselection of candidates for the next Queensland state election. At the same time, he announced he was quitting the party as well, and would once again sit as an independent. Party founder and federal leader Clive Palmer, himself a Queenslander, countered that Douglas had been in talks to merge with Katter's Australian Party, led by his uncle.

References

Alex Douglas (politician) Wikipedia