Mal Brough

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The Honourable
Mal Brough
MP
Special Minister of State
In office
21 September 2015 – 29 December 2015
Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull
Preceded by Michael Ronaldson
Succeeded by Matthias Cormann
Minister for Defence Materiel and Science
In office
21 September 2015 – 29 December 2015
Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull
Preceded by Stuart Robert
Succeeded by Marise Payne
Minister for Families, Community Services and Indigenous Affairs
In office
27 January 2006 – 3 December 2007
Prime Minister John Howard
Preceded by Kay Patterson
Succeeded by Jenny Macklin
Minister for Revenue and Assistant Treasurer
In office
18 July 2004 – 27 January 2006
Prime Minister John Howard
Preceded by Helen Coonan
Succeeded by Peter Dutton
Minister for Employment Participation
In office
14 February 2001 – 18 July 2004
Prime Minister John Howard
Preceded by Tony Abbott
Succeeded by Fran Bailey
Member of the Australian Parliament
for Fisher
Assumed office
7 September 2013
Preceded by Peter Slipper
Member of the Australian Parliament
for Longman
In office
2 March 1996 – 24 November 2007
Preceded by Constituency Created
Succeeded by Jon Sullivan
Personal details
Born Malcolm Thomas Brough
(1961-12-29) 29 December 1961 (age 62)
Brisbane, Queensland, Australia
Political party Liberal Party of Australia
Spouse(s) Sue Brough
Relations Rob Brough (brother)
Alma mater Monash University
Military service
Service/branch Australian Army
Years of service 1979–1987
Rank Captain

Malcolm Thomas "Mal" Brough (/ˈbrʌf/ BRUFF; born 29 December 1961) is an Australian politician who is the Liberal National member for the Division of Fisher in the Australian House of Representatives. he was elected at the 2013 federal election. Brough was the member for the Division of Longman from the 1996 election to his defeat at the 2007 election. He held various positions in John Howard's second, third, and fourth ministries, and sat in cabinet as Minister for Families and Community Services and Indigenous Affairs from 2006 to 2007. In this role, he conducted the controversial Northern Territory Emergency Response. From Brisbane, Brough was a member of the Liberal Party, and briefly served as president of the party's Queensland Division in 2008, until he resigned following its merger with the Queensland Division of the National Party. He later joined the new Liberal National Party.

Early life

He was born on 29 December 1961 in Brisbane, Queensland, and was an Australian Army officer and businessman before entering politics. His brother, Rob Brough, is a former host of Family Feud and a former Seven News presenter. Brough has Aboriginal ancestry through his maternal grandmother, Violet, whose father was an indigenous Australian.[1]

Political career

Brough was Parliamentary Secretary to the Minister for Employment, Workplace Relations and Small Business 2000–01 and Minister for Employment Services from 2001 to 2004. In July 2004 he was moved to the portfolios of Assistant Treasurer and Minister for Revenue. He was Minister for Families and Community Services and Indigenous Affairs from January 2006 to November 2007. In his Indigenous Affairs portfolio, Brough was the chief architect of the government's Northern Territory Emergency Response, a package of measures designed to combat alleged high rates of child neglect and abuse in the territory.

Brough was one of a number of government MPs including John Howard who lost their seats at the 2007 election. Brough suffered a swing of 10.3 points in the two-party-preferred vote in his seat, to finish with a vote of 46.4 percent. He was succeeded by Labor's Jon Sullivan.[2]

Following the 2007 federal election,[3] Brough remained outside of the House of Representatives until the 2013 federal election when Brough he was elected for the seat of Fisher.

State politics

Brough was elected as the President of the Queensland division of the Liberal Party in May 2008.[4] He remained in that position after a vote in July 2008 to merge into the new Liberal National Party of Queensland (LNP). He opposed the merger as it had not received final ratification from the federal Liberal Party. On 26 September 2008 he resigned from his post, saying: "You try and do the right thing and, quite frankly, at this point it's all over the shop and it's no wonder voters get so disenchanted with the non-Labor side of politics."[5]

It was because of his opposition of the merger to the LNP that he was not a candidate for his former seat of Longman at the 2010 Federal election. That would have meant securing preselection from the LNP in order to have a good chance of reclaiming the seat. He also criticised the party leading up to the 2010 election on its absence of policies, but he did not rule out running for his resident seat of Fisher against Peter Slipper, a National party member who had joined the Liberals.[6]

Federal politics and diary allegations

In mid-2012, following the defection of Peter Slipper from the Liberals to become an Independent MP and Speaker of the House of Representatives, Brough announced that he was seeking LNP preselection for the seat of Fisher for the next federal election.[7] On 29 July 2012, it was announced that had won the preselection for the seat,[8] despite criticism over his contact with James Ashby. Ashby had been an adviser to Slipper who had made accusation of sexual harassment. Justice Steve Rares found that Brough had acted with Ashby and another Slipper staffer, Karen Doane, in abusing the judicial process for the "purpose of causing significant public, reputational and political damage to Mr Slipper".[9] On 9 October 2012, Slipper resigned as Speaker following revelations of mobile phone text messages he had sent to Ashby, and was replaced by Anna Burke. In an early 2014 appeal ruling the full bench of the Federal Court found that Justice Rares had 'no basis to conclude that Brough was part of any combination with anyone in respect to the commencement of these proceedings with the predominant purpose of damaging Slipper in the way alleged or at all,' and that there was 'nothing untoward about those matters'.[10]

On 29 December 2015 Brough stood down from the Turnbull ministry and moved to the backbench pending the completion of an investigation by the Australian Federal Police over the alleged copying of the diary of former speaker Peter Slipper. Jamie Briggs also resigned on the same day. Questions were raised over the holiday timing of the announcements.[11][12][13][14]

References

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  3. http://tracker.org.au/2012/08/bringing-back-the-brough-10-of-the-worst-things-mad-mal-did-in-office/
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  10. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found. The majority judgment of the Full Federal Court stated that there was insufficient evidence to support the finding of Rares J at trial: Ashby v Slipper [2014] FCAFC 15 at [120]-[122] (Mansfield and Gilmour JJ).
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External links

Parliament of Australia
New division Member for Longman
1996–2007
Succeeded by
Jon Sullivan
Preceded by Member for Fisher
2013–present
Incumbent
Political offices
Preceded by Minister for Employment Services
2001–2004
Succeeded by
Fran Bailey
Preceded by Minister for Revenue and Assistant Treasurer
2004–2006
Succeeded by
Peter Dutton
Preceded by Minister for Families and Community
Services and Indigenous Affairs

2006–2007
Succeeded by
Jenny Macklin
Preceded by Special Minister of State
2015
Succeeded by
Mathias Cormann
as acting
Preceded by Minister for Defence Materiel and Science
2015
Succeeded by
Marise Payne
as acting