Tripti Joshi (Editor)

Jacqui Lambie

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Preceded by
  
Party created

Role
  
Australian Senator

Siblings
  
Bobby Lambie

Name
  
Jacqui Lambie

Service/branch
  
Profession
  
Politician

Residence
  
Burnie, Australia

Children
  
2

Party
  
Independent politician


Jacqui Lambie tasmaniantimescomimagesarticles0a592b3b9e5266f

Born
  
26 February 1971 (age 53) Ulverstone, Tasmania, Australia (
1971-02-26
)

Political party
  
Jacqui Lambie NetworkPrevious affiliations;Liberal (before 2011)Palmer United (2013–14)Independent (2014–15)

Education
  
Devonport High School (attended)

Occupation
  
SoldierMilitary policewomanLabourer

Office
  
Australian Senator since 2014

Similar People
  
Clive Palmer, Glenn Lazarus, Ricky Muir, Zhenya Wang, Pauline Hanson

Profiles

Senator jacqui lambie struggles to explain sharia law


Jacquiline Louise "Jacqui" Lambie (born 26 February 1971) is an Australian politician who is the leader and founder of the Jacqui Lambie Network (JLN). First serving as the deputy leader of the Palmer United Party (PUP), she received national prominence for her intense grassroots campaign and subsequently her display of aggressive and vociferous parliamentary behaviour, championing issues concerning foreign affairs, veterans' affairs, youth unemployment and the criticism of Islam. At a climax of internal party division, Lambie resigned from the Palmer United Party (PUP), and sat as an Independent before she formed her own political party.

Contents

Jacqui Lambie Jacqui Lambie eyes PM role after telling Abbott to

Lambie attended Devonport High School before joining the Australian Army in 1989. After basic training, she was assigned to the Royal Australian Corps of Transport in 1990 where she oversaw the transport and distribution of military supply. She remained with the Transport Corps for five years before being transferred to the Royal Australian Corps of Military Police, where she worked for another five years, achieving the rank of Corporal. Towards the conclusion of her Military service, Lambie sustained a back injury during a field exercise, resulting in long-term detriments to her spine, and began receiving a military pension from the Department of Veterans' Affairs (DVA). She later applied for additional compensation on the grounds of claiming to suffer from depression, caused by her back pain. Following a private investigation, Lambie was accused of being a malingerer, and her pension was cancelled, prompting her to begin a six-year legal dispute with the DVA, beginning in 2000.

Jacqui Lambie Jacqui Lambie sets up her own political party

Attempting to seek Liberal preselection after joining the party in 2011, and previously working as a staff member of Tasmanian Labor senator Nick Sherry, Lambie joined the Palmer United Party (PUP), led by Australian billionaire Clive Palmer. She was elected to the Australian Senate at the 2013 federal election. Her term began in July 2014. In November 2014, Lambie resigned from the Palmer United Party to sit in the Senate as an independent.

Jacqui Lambie Jacqui Lambie meets 39the devil39 Clive Palmer for drinks in

In May 2015, she formed the Jacqui Lambie Network political party, established with Lambie as its leader.

Jacqui Lambie Jacqui Lambie my politics

Jacqui lambie s personal quest to combat ice addiction


Early life

Jacqui Lambie Coalition applauds Lambie39s climate denying pronuclear

Lambie was born in the town of Ulverstone in north-western Tasmania. Her parents separated when she was 13, and she was raised in a public housing estate in Devonport, attending Devonport High School until she left at Year 11. She took a year off before deciding to apply to join the army, but fell pregnant shortly before her enlistment, with her first child, Brentyn.

Australian Army (1989–2000)

Lambie enlisted in the Australian Army in 1989, where she served for over ten years, first in the transport corps, and subsequently as a military policewoman. She achieved the rank of corporal.

During a field exercise in July 1997, Lambie suffered injuries that resulted in severe back pain. After physical therapy and medical interventions, she was unable to regain operational fitness and was discharged for medical reasons (thoracic pain) in 2000. She has since been an advocate for veterans with the Returned and Services League of Australia and involved in fund raising with the Burnie Chamber of Commerce, the Country Women's Association and Rotary.

Dispute with the Department of Veterans' Affairs (2000–2006)

The Department of Veterans' Affairs (DVA) initially rejected her application for compensation, but subsequently approved it and put her on a military disability pension. She later applied for compensation for depression related to her back pain, which was also initially rejected. The DVA hired a private investigation firm to conduct five hours of surveillance on her activities within her home. On the basis of this surveillance, the department concluded that she was a malingerer, cancelling her military pension and coverage of her medical care.

Lambie fought the department's conclusion for five years, during which time she was accepted for a Centrelink disability pension. In 2006, the Administrative Appeals Tribunal was about to rule on whether the video evidence was admissible in her case when DVA abandoned its use of the video and accepted that Lambie was entitled to compensation. The tribunal's deputy president, Justice Christopher Wright, concluded that "it is likely that even greater improvement would have been achieved a long time ago if her medical treatments, which were initially funded by the respondent, had not been terminated in 2001".

Early political career (2008–2012)

Lambie's political involvement began in 2008 when she began working for Tasmanian Labor senator Nick Sherry.

In November 2011, she joined the Liberal Party of Australia and later decided to run for preselection for the Division of Braddon. However she subsequently left the Liberal Party, saying that the Liberals are a "boys' club", and she joined to "infiltrate" them to see what she could learn about politics.

In 2012, Lambie sold her house to help fund her run as an independent, before turning to the newly formed Palmer United Party founded by billionaire Clive Palmer – as she said "I just didn't have the money like the big players did for advertising."

Senate (2013–present)

In the 2013 federal election, Lambie won Tasmania's sixth Senate seat as a candidate for the Palmer United Party, receiving 6.58% of first preference votes. She has credited the final result of her win to "the big man upstairs" – referring not to Palmer, but to God: "Once it gets to that point, it's up to God upstairs. There's not much else I can do about it."

On 24 November 2014, Senator Lambie resigned from the Palmer United Party, announcing that she would remain in the Senate as an independent. Lambie's resignation followed several weeks of disagreements with party leader Clive Palmer.

She was re-elected to the Senate in the Australian federal election, 2016.

Jacqui Lambie Network (2015–present)

In April 2015 Lambie applied to register a political party called the Jacqui Lambie Network.

In May 2015 the party was registered with the Australian Electoral Commission, with Lambie as its leader. The party plans to run candidates in federal and state elections, in all houses.

Same-sex marriage

She has stated that she opposes same-sex marriage in Australia for religious reasons. As of August 2016, she supports a parliamentary vote or a referendum.

Foreign policy

In August 2014, she expressed her belief that China could invade Australia: "If anybody thinks that we should have a national security and defence policy, which ignores the threat of a Chinese Communist invasion – you're delusional and got rocks in your head ... The Communist Chinese military capacity and level of threat to the western world democracies is at an unprecedented and historical high." Her comments incurred a rebuke from the Premier of Tasmania Will Hodgman. She later added Indonesia as a potential military threat.

In October 2015 she declared her opposition to the China–Australia Free Trade Agreement, saying she considers the Chinese government to be "push[ing] totalitarian ideologies", "anti-democratic" and "a bully, thief, liar and international human rights abuser".

In October 2014, Lambie stated in a radio interview with ABC Radio National that she liked Vladimir Putin, saying: "I think he has very strong leadership. He has great values. He's certainly doing his bit to stamp out terrorism and I guess you've got to pay the man for that."

In October 2016, she called for a pre-emptive pardon for any defence personnel accused of war crimes against the Taliban or Islamic State, on the grounds that Taliban and Islamic State fighters were not entitled to the protection of the rules of war or international human rights because of their "subhuman behaviour and vile, disgusting culture and ideology".

Islam, Burqa ban and Sharia law

In September 2014, Lambie announced plans to introduce a private member's bill aimed at banning the burqa in Australia. However, constitutional expert Professor George Williams described the law as "unworkable, it would frankly be a bit silly". She also attacked supporters of Islamic sharia law, describing them as "maniacs and depraved humans" who will not stop committing "cold-blooded butchery and rapes until every woman in Australia wears a burka". However, when asked to explain her understanding of sharia law in an interview, she was unable to and instead said "it obviously involves terrorism". According to ABC political reporter Andrew Greene, some commentators described the interview as a "train wreck". In February 2017, she introduced a private member's bill which would amend the Criminal Code Act 1995 to make it illegal to wear full face coverings in public places when a terrorism threat declaration is in force, unless it was necessary for certain purposes.

In January 2017, she said that Australia should follow Donald Trump's lead in his order to restrict entry of citizens of certain Muslim-majority countries to the USA. She called for deporting from Australia all Muslims who supported Sharia law, as well as deporting everyone on the ASIO terror watch list, or at least charging them with treason or sedition.

Support for the death penalty

In February 2015, Lambie called for the reintroduction of the death penalty for Australian citizens who leave the country to become foreign fighters.

National service

Lambie has made comments suggesting her support for potential reintroduction of national service, stating "It's time to teach [our youth] some respect, loyalty and honour."

The Greens

In October 2013 she criticised the Australian Greens, accusing them of having "destroyed all hope in Tasmania" and saying that the party should be subject to a Senate inquiry over the state's high unemployment rate. In July 2015 she likened The Greens to Islamic State in that "both those groups would like us to go back and live in the dark ages ... They'd like us to go live back in caves with candles and eat tofu."

Tony Abbott

In June 2014 Lambie referred to the then Prime Minister Tony Abbott as a "bare-faced, uncaring liar".

Raising alleged abuse within the army

In February 2016, Lambie raised the matter of former soldiers who claim to have suffered abuse, calling for an inquiry into cover-ups and Lieutenant General David Morrison's involvement.

Personal life

Lambie is single, with two children. She gave birth to her first son Brentyn at age 18 in 1989, the product of her relationship with a high school boyfriend, after her enlistment for the Army. She met John Milverton while working in the Royal Australian Corps of Transport. They began a de facto marriage, where Milverton formally adopted Brentyn, and also went on to have another son, Dylan, born in 1992. Milverton and Lambie split shortly before her discharge from the Army in 2000.

Lambie lives in the city of Burnie, on the North Coast of Tasmania. She has jokingly described her perfect man as having "heaps of cash" and "a package between their legs". Her comments were met with much ire, and she later declared it to be her most embarrassing moment.

In her maiden speech to Parliament in 2014, Lambie stated that, through her mother's family, she shares "blood, culture, and history" with Aboriginal Australians, as a descendant of Mannalargenna, an Aboriginal Tasmanian leader. However, her claims of Indigenous descent have been questioned by several sources including Australian Story, the Tasmanian Pioneer Index and community elder and Aboriginal Land Council of Tasmania chairman Clyde Mansell.

She describes herself as "a Catholic; I'm religious" — citing it as a reason for rejecting an invitation to visit a Sydney mosque.

In August 2015, she went public with her 21-year-old son's battle with methamphetamine. She has also revealed that she was addicted to pain medication, spent months in a psychiatric ward and attempted suicide once.

References

Jacqui Lambie Wikipedia