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Julie Owens

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Preceded by
  
Name
  
Julie Owens

Occupation
  
Small business owner


Nationality
  
Australian

Party
  
Australian Labor Party

Julie Owens d3n8a8pro7vhmxcloudfrontnetaustralianlaborparty

Born
  
17 October 1958 (age 65) Rockhampton, Queensland, Australia (
1958-10-17
)

Office
  
Member of the Australian Parliament since 2004

Books
  
Interim Report No. 3: Monitoring and Review of Procedural Changes Implemented in the 43rd Parliament : the Effectiveness of Reforms to the House Committee System

Profiles


Political party
  
Australian Labor Party

Hon julie owens discussing religious rights


Julie Ann Owens (born 17 October 1958), Australian politician, has been an Australian Labor Party member of the Australian House of Representatives since October 2004, representing the Division of Parramatta, New South Wales.

Contents

She was born in Rockhampton, Queensland, and was educated at the Queensland Conservatorium of Music (now a part of Griffith University) and at the University of Sydney. She was a production manager at the Lyric Opera of Queensland from 1985–89 and senior program officer at the Australia Council from 1989–93. She then became a small-business owner and CEO of the Association of Australian Independent Record Labels (AIR) before entering Parliament.

Owens' first foray into politics came in 1996, when she stood as the Labor candidate in Division of North Sydney. She was given very little chance of winning, given that North Sydney has long been a conservative stronghold, and was soundly defeated by Liberal Joe Hockey.

In the 2004 election campaign, Owens ran against the incumbent Liberal Ross Cameron. The campaign was notable for the admission by Cameron, a prominent family values campaigner, that he had had an extramarital affair, and Owens won the seat on preferences, despite a swing against the Labor Party in New South Wales.

Owens is a backbencher and has been a member of the House of Representatives Standing Committee for Communications, Information Technology and the Arts from December 2004. Although her seat was made notionally Liberal in a redistribution ahead of the 2007 election, she did not only retained her seat, but recorded a healthy swing of seven percent. She won a third term in 2010 with only a small swing against her, and narrowly won a fourth term in 2013 even as Labor lost government. Her 2013 victory marked only the second time (her initial win being the first) that the Liberals or their predecessors have been in government without holding Parramatta.

Following the resignation of Labor MP Craig Thomson from the chair of the Economics Committee, Owens was appointed head of the Committee.


References

Julie Owens Wikipedia


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