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词条 Kezia Purick
释义

  1. Early life and education

  2. Political career

  3. Personal life

  4. References

{{Use Australian English|date=December 2015}}{{Use dmy dates|date=January 2015}}{{Infobox politician
|honorific-prefix = The Honourable
|name = Kezia Purick
|honorific-suffix = MLA
|image =
|alt =
|caption =
|order = 9th
|office = Speaker of the Northern Territory Legislative Assembly
|predecessor1 = Jane Aagaard
|term_start = 23 October 2012
|term_end =
|deputy1 = Gary Higgins (2012-2015)
Matt Conlan (2015-2016)
Chansey Paech (2016-present)
|constituency_AM2 = Goyder
|assembly2 = Northern Territory Legislative
|majority2 =
|term_start2 = 9 August 2008
|term_end2 =
|predecessor2 = Ted Warren
|successor2 =
|birth_date = {{Birth date and age|df=yes|1958|5|12}}
|birth_place = Brisbane, Queensland, Australia
|birthname = Kezia Dorcas Tibisay Purick
|nationality = Australian
|party = Country Liberal (2008–2015)
Independent (2015–present)
|relations = Noel Padgham-Purich (mother)
|residence = Darwin
|education = Methodist Ladies' College, Perth
|alma_mater = University of Western Australia
|occupation = Business executive}}

Kezia Dorcas Tibisay Purick (born 12 May 1958) is an Australian politician. She is an independent member of the Northern Territory Legislative Assembly, having held her seat of Goyder since the 2008 election. Prior to entering Parliament, Purick was the CEO of the NT Minerals Council for 16 years. Originally elected as a member of the Country Liberal Party, she became an independent in 2015.

She has served as Speaker of the Northern Territory Legislative Assembly since the CLP's victory in the 2012 Territory election, a post she retained after leaving the CLP. Following Territory Labor's landslide victory at the 2016 Territory election, the new Labor government retained Purick as Speaker.

Early life and education

Purick was born in Brisbane, Queensland. She was educated in Western Australia at Methodist Ladies' College, Perth. She graduated with a Bachelor of Commerce from the University of Western Australia.[1]

She worked for St John Ambulance Australia from 1985 until 1991, when she became CEO of the NT Minerals Council.[1]

Political career

Purick was preselected as CLP candidate for Goyder at the 2008 Territory election. The seat, long a CLP stronghold, had been taken by Labor's Ted Warren in Labor's 2005 landslide. However, a redistribution made the once vast hybrid urban-rural seat slightly more compact, adding some conservative-leaning territory on Darwin's outer fringe. This was enough to erase Warren's already slim majority and make the seat a notional CLP seat. Purick defeated Warren on a swing of over seven percent, enough to revert Goyder to its traditional status as a safe CLP seat.[2]

She served as shadow minister for Major Projects, Trade and Economic Development, Planning and Lands, Housing, Statehood and Women's Policy in the Territory opposition from 2008 to 2012.[3] In addition, she was deputy leader of the CLP, and therefore deputy leader of the opposition.

Prior to the 2012 election, party leader Terry Mills indicated that should the party win government, Purick would remain as his deputy, and hence become Deputy Chief Minister. The parliamentary wing of the party overrode Mills' preference; Robyn Lambley was elected as deputy leader, and Purick was left out of cabinet.[4]

When the parliament resumed on 23 October 2012, Purick was elected unopposed as Speaker of the Legislative Assembly.[5] As Speaker, Purick is chairman of the House Committee, a member of the Standing Orders and Legal and Constitutional Affairs Committees and is the chairman of the select committee enquiring into foetal alcohol spectrum disorder.

As speaker, Purick was well known for criticising the federal government of Malcolm Turnbull, even though the CLP was part of the Liberal/National Coalition. When the federal Minister for Social Services Kevin Andrews, suggested de facto couples don't stay together as long as married couples, Purick took to Facebook to denounce him as a "pooncy, pasty faced person from some pissant place that no one cares about," and pointed out most of her constituents are in de facto relationships. She also threatened him with a "green rubber ring"—a castration device for young bulls—if he dared to tell her constituents how they should live.[6]

On 20 July 2015, Purick announced that she was quitting the CLP because of her annoyance at the lack of integrity within the government and government's lack of communication with elected CLP members. She said she would continue to sit in parliament as an independent and wanted to remain as Speaker; both major parties supported keeping Purick in the speaker's chair. Purick's move to the crossbench reduced the CLP to a minority government; earlier in the year, three indigenous CLP MPs had also left the CLP to become independents. However, she undertook not to support any motion of no-confidence against the government for the remainder of the term, saying, "Territorians voted this government into office and have the ultimate right and responsibility to unelect it."[7]

On 17 November 2015, Attorney-General John Elferink moved a motion to suspend standing orders to debate removing Purick from the Speaker's role, citing what he claimed were partial comments she had posted on Facebook regarding government-funded advertising about anti-ice legislation. On the morning of 18 November, the CLP and independent Larisa Lee passed Elferink's motion to spill the speakership role. The CLP nominated Matt Conlan to replace Purick. However, when the ballot to elect a new speaker was held, Labor and Delia Lawrie re-nominated Purick to stand against Conlan, and an unknown CLP member "crossed the floor" to vote for Purick, allowing her to regain her old post by 13 votes to 12.[8]

Labor won a massive majority at the 2016 Territory election, reducing the CLP to only two seats—fewer than the five independents in the chamber. Although Labor had more than enough numbers to elect one of its own members as Speaker, the incoming government of Michael Gunner re-appointed Purick as Speaker.[9]

Personal life

Purick is one of six children and the daughter of former politician Noel Padgham, who was a member of the assembly from 1977 to 1997. Her father, Phillip Purich, was an appointed member for the Legislative Council in the 1960s. Born in Amsterdam, his family was originally from the Dalmatia region of Croatia.[10][11]

References

1. ^Who's Who in Australia 2015, ConnectWeb.
2. ^{{cite web|first=Antony|last=Green|authorlink=Antony Green|title=Goyder|work=2008 Northern Territory Election|publisher=Australian Broadcasting Corporation|year=2008|url=http://www.abc.net.au/elections/nt/2008/guide/goyd.htm|accessdate=30 October 2010}}
3. ^Opposition Portfolios, Legislative Assembly of the Northern Territory, 2008–2012.
4. ^{{cite news|last=Betts|first=Alyssa|title=Mills cops flak over axed deputy|url=http://www.ntnews.com.au/article/2012/08/29/313210_ntnews.html|accessdate=14 September 2012|newspaper=The NT News|date=29 August 2012}}
5. ^{{cite news|last=Rawlinson|first=Clare|title=Opening of parliament welcomes new speaker|url=http://www.abc.net.au/local/photos/2012/10/23/3616939.htm|accessdate=23 October 2012|newspaper=ABC Darwin|date=23 October 2012}}
6. ^{{cite news|last1=Davidson|first1=Helen|title=Kevin Andrews slammed by NT politician for comments on de factos|url=https://www.theguardian.com/australia-news/2014/nov/05/kevin-andrews-slammed-by-nt-politician-for-comments-on-de-factos|accessdate=31 May 2017|work=The Guardian|date=5 November 2014}}
7. ^{{cite news|last1=Davidson|first1=Helen|title=NT government loses majority after Speaker Kezia Purick quits CLP|url=https://www.theguardian.com/australia-news/2015/jul/20/nt-government-loses-majority-speaker-kezia-purick-quits|accessdate=31 May 2017|work=The Guardian|date=20 July 2015}}
8. ^{{cite news|title=Kezia Purick fired and rehired: Attorney-General fails in bid to dump Kezia Purick|url=http://www.abc.net.au/news/2015-11-18/move-to-dump-nt-speaker-kezia-purick-in-late-night-motion-fails/6950232|accessdate=19 November 2015|work=ABC News|date=18 November 2015}}
9. ^NT Labor Government announces female-dominated Cabinet: ABC 11 September 2016
10. ^Kezia Purick, Territory Women, 2010.
11. ^{{cite news|last1=Davidson|first1=Helen|title=Kezia Purick: 'Some say I'm to the right of Genghis Khan, which is OK by me'|url=https://www.theguardian.com/australia-news/2016/jan/01/kezia-purick-northern-territory-speaker-genghis-khan|accessdate=1 January 2016|work=The Guardian|date=1 January 2016}}
{{s-start}}{{s-par|au-nt}}{{s-bef|before=Ted Warren}}{{s-ttl|title=Member for Goyder|years=2008–present}}{{s-inc|rows=2}}{{s-bef|before=Jane Aagaard}}{{s-ttl|title=Speaker of the Northern Territory Legislative Assembly|years=2012–present}}{{s-ppo}}{{s-bef|before=Fay Miller}}{{s-ttl|title=Deputy Leader of the Country Liberal Party | years=2008–2012}}{{s-aft|after=Robyn Lambley}}{{s-end}}{{Presiding officers of Australian legislatures}}{{NTCurrentMPs}}{{DEFAULTSORT:Purick, Kezia}}

14 : 1958 births|Living people|Members of the Northern Territory Legislative Assembly|Speakers of the Northern Territory Legislative Assembly|Independent members of the Northern Territory Legislative Assembly|Country Liberal Party members of the Northern Territory Legislative Assembly|Women members of the Northern Territory Legislative Assembly|Australian chief executives|People educated at Methodist Ladies' College, Perth|University of Western Australia alumni|Australian people of Croatian descent|Australian people of Dutch descent|21st-century Australian politicians|21st-century women politicians

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