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Paula Wriedt

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Resigned
  
January 18, 2009

Party
  
Australian Labor Party

Spouse
  
Dale Rahmanovic

Name
  
Paula Wriedt


Paula Wriedt wwwsmhcomauffximage20080805paulawriedtnar

Born
  
11 December 1968 (age 55) Hobart, Tasmania, Australia (
1968-12-11
)

Children
  
Daniel (b. 2000), Amy (b. 2001)

Role
  
Former Member of the Tasmanian House of Assembly

Previous office
  
Member of the Tasmanian House of Assembly (1996–2009)

Political party
  
Australian Labor Party

Paula Catherine Wriedt (born 11 December 1968, Hobart) is a former Australian politician. She was an Australian Labor Party member of the Tasmanian House of Assembly, representing the outer suburban Hobart seat of Franklin. She was first elected to parliament in the 1996 election. Wriedt is the daughter of former state Labor leader and Whitlam Government Minister for Agriculture Ken Wriedt.

Contents

Paula Wriedt Paula Wriedt39s long recovery road The Advertiser

Wriedt was appointed Minister for Education in 1998, becoming the youngest ever female member of Cabinet in Tasmania. As Education Minister, in December 2000, she launched "Learning Together", a major policy on education, training and information provision for the state of Tasmania. Learning Together promised a complete overhaul of the state's education system, introducing the Essential Learnings Curriculum as a trial way to assess and teach students. Wriedt also funded the establishment of a number of child care centres co-located with government primary schools, and saw the raising of Tasmania's school leaving age from 16 to 17 years.

In 2002 she also became Minister for Women. In 2005, Wriedt initiated the Tasmanian Honour Roll of Women to recognise the significant contribution that women have made to Tasmania throughout history.

In the 2006 Tasmanian state election Wriedt suffered a decline in her primary vote, almost losing her seat to Liberal challenger Vanessa Goodwin, after criticism of the government over the Essential Learnings Curriculum. After the election, she became Minister for Tourism, Arts and the Environment, while David Bartlett assumed her Education portfolio. Following a cabinet reshuffle in January 2008, Wriedt was appointed Minister for Economic Development and Tourism.

Controversies

On 31 July 2008, Wriedt was the subject of a comment, which some described as a "lewd" remark, made by Sam Newman on the Nine Network's AFL Footy Show. Wriedt appeared on the show to announce a A$4 million sponsorship deal for a Tasmanian AFL team bid. Wriedt described the remark as "stupid and inappropriate", and Newman apologised the following day.

The following week, on 4 August 2008, Wriedt was admitted to hospital after an apparent suicide attempt. Premier David Bartlett announced that she would require a period of treatment and recuperation, and that he would be temporarily handling Wriedt's ministerial duties.

On 6 August 2008, Wriedt released a statement acknowledging that she had been suffering from depression following the breakdown of her marriage to Dale Rahmanovic in February 2008 as a consequence of an affair she had with former chauffeur Ben Chaffey, which had commenced a year earlier. Chaffey commenced legal proceedings seeking an ex-gratia payment of about $150,000, claiming the fall-out from the affair had left him unable to resume his work duties. Chaffey was subsequently awarded $40 000 on 24 November 2008.

On 12 September 2008 Premier Bartlett asked the Governor of Tasmania to withdraw Wriedt's commission, ending her appointment as a minister.

On 18 January 2009 Wriedt announced her retirement from the Tasmanian parliament, citing her ongoing battle with depression.

On March 8, 2017, during an International Women’s Day panel discussion on ABC Local Radio, Wriedt clarified that she was not a member of any political party, saying that after she retired from Parliament in 2009 she “did not receive a membership renewal form from the ALP, which I took as a message that I was no longer welcome”. She also mentioned that her more enduring friendships from her days in politics were “more from her former opposition colleagues”.

Post-parliamentary career

Wriedt was appointed executive officer of Cystic Fibrosis Tasmania in 2010.

References

Paula Wriedt Wikipedia