Andrew Damien Wilkie(born 8 November 1961) is an Australian politician and independent federal member forClark(previouslyDenison). Before entering politics Wilkie was an infantry officer in theAustralian Army.[1]
Andrew Wilkie | |
---|---|
![]() Wilkie speaking at an anti-pulp mill rally in 2007 | |
Member of theAustralian Parliament forClark | |
Assumed office 18 May 2019 | |
Preceded by | Electorate established |
Member of theAustralian Parliament forDenison | |
In office 21 August 2010 – 18 May 2019 | |
Preceded by | Duncan Kerr |
Succeeded by | Electorate abolished |
Personal details | |
Born | Andrew Damien Wilkie 8 November 1961 Tamworth,New South Wales,Australia |
Political party | Independent(since 2008) |
Other political affiliations | Greens(2003–2008) Liberal(1980–1986) |
Spouses | |
Children | 2 |
Residence(s) | Hobart,Tasmania,Australia |
Alma mater | Royal Military College, Duntroon University of New South Wales |
Occupation | |
Signature | ![]() |
Website | www |
Military service | |
Allegiance | ![]() |
Branch/service | ![]() |
Years of service | 1980–2004 |
Rank | ![]() |
Unit | Royal Australian Infantry Corps |
Commands | 6th Battalion, Royal Australian Regiment |
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Wilkie served with the Australian Army from 1980 to 2004. An officer with theRoyal Australian Infantry Corpswho had earlier commanded a company of the6th Battalion, Royal Australian Regiment,[2]at the time of his entry to public life Wilkie was posted to Australia'sOffice of National Assessmentsas anintelligence analyst.In 2003, in the lead-up to theIraq War,he resigned from his position at ONA because he feared the humanitarian consequences of invasion, such asSaddam Husseinusing his weapons of mass destruction or assisting terrorists.
Following his resignation he said: Iraq's "weapons of mass destruction program is very disjointed and contained by the regime that's been in place since the last Gulf War. And there is no hard intelligence linking the Iraqi regime to al-Qaeda in any substantial or worrisome way." He opposedAustralia's contributionto the2003 invasion of Iraqunder theHoward government.[3][4]Wilkie later argued the Iraq War was based on a "lie".[5]
Wilkie has been active in politics since 2003. He was aGreenscandidate for the federalDivision of Bennelongin the2004 federal electionand for theSenatein Tasmania at the2007 federal election.In 2010 he stood as an independent candidate for the state seat ofDenisonat theTasmanian state election,narrowly missing out on the final vacancy. Later in the year, again as an independent candidate, he ran for thefederal seat of Denisonat the2010 federal electionand won, finishing third on the primary vote but winning the seat after the distribution of preferences.[6]Wilkie finished first on the primary vote at both the2013 federal electionand2016 federal election,increasing his margin each time. In 2019, the Division of Denison was replaced by theDivision of Clark,to which Wilkie was transferred. He retained the seat at the2022 Australian federal electionby a margin of 20.82%.
Early life and education
editWilkie attendedSt Gregory's College, Campbelltown[7]and later trained at theRoyal Military College, Duntroon[8]and graduated in 1984.[9]He joined theYoung Liberalswhile a cadet. He also studied at theUniversity of New South Wales,and holds aBachelor of Artsdegree, a Graduate Diploma of Management, and a Graduate Diploma of Defence Studies. After graduation and being stationed in Brisbane, he joined theLiberal Partybefore allowing his membership to lapse.[10]His military career spanned 1980–2001 and he rose to the rank oflieutenant colonel.[11]He was seconded to the ONA, an Australianintelligence agency,from 1999 until late 2000.[11][12]After a stint with US defence companyRaytheon,[8]Wilkie returned to the ONA shortly after theSeptember 11 attacks.[11][12]
Military career, 1980–2003
editWilkie joined the Army in 1980, and was first stationed inBrisbane, Queensland.He served in theRoyal Australian Infantry Corpsand achieved the rank oflieutenant colonel.He was discharged in 2001.[1]
Opposition to Iraq War
editIn the aftermath of the September 11 Terror Attacks, the United States called upon Australia to assist in enforcing the 1991 Gulf War peace treaty which had beenrepeatedly breached by Saddam Hussein's Iraq.[citation needed]Iraq failed to comply with demands to allow unfettered arms inspections, and theHoward governmentelected to send forces to support the2003 invasion of Iraq.While the Government was considering the case for war, Wilkie was asked to report on humanitarian considerations. According to a leaked report published in theHerald Sun,in December 2002 Wilkie submitted to the government anOffice of National Assessmentsreport on the humanitarian implications of war in Iraq. In the report he cautioned against unpredictable and potentially serious humanitarian consequences of war with Iraq, such as the use of weapons of mass destruction against civilians.[13]
In response towidespread opposition to the war,Wilkie gave extensive television interviews and accepted numerous offers of public speaking engagements.[citation needed]He subsequently gave evidence to official British and Australian inquiries into the government's case for involvement in the Iraq war.[12]In 2004, Wilkie publishedAxis of Deceit,an account of the reasons for his decision and its results.[14]He describes his views on the nature of intelligence agencies and the analyst's work, the history of the Iraq war, the untruths of politicians and the attempts to suppress the truth.[citation needed]
Following Britain's 2016Chilcot Reportwhich criticised the Blair Government's prosecution of the war, Wilkie said that Howard, Bush and Blair should be brought before an international court, and called for Australia to hold another inquiry into the war.[5]Howard rejected Wilkie's proposition and called him "irrational", telling the media: "Andrew Wilkie said the Iraq invasion was responsible for the Bali attack of 2005. What about the Bali attack of 2002? And he blamed it [the Iraq War] on theLindt Cafe siege.I mean, this is irrational. "[15]
Resignation from ONA (2003)
editOn 11 March 2003, Wilkie resigned from the ONA, stating that while it was likely that Iraq did possess weapons of mass destruction, its program in this area was contained, that international sanctions were having an effect, and therefore an invasion was premature and also reckless in potentially provoking Saddam Hussein to use those weapons and possibly even begin supporting terrorism.[16]He told the ABC: "I think that invading Iraq at this time would be wrong. For a start, Iraq does not pose a security threat to any other country at this point in time. Its military is very weak, it's a fraction of the size of the military at the time of the invasion of Kuwait. Its weapons of mass destruction program is very disjointed and contained by the regime that's been in place since the last Gulf War. And there is no hard intelligence linking the Iraqi regime to al-Qaeda in any substantial or worrisome way."[17]Wilkie later told the press that in the lead up to his resignation he had increasingly encounteredethical conflictbetween his duty as an intelligence officer and his "respect for the truth".[9]In 2016, after appearing at theChilcot enquiry,Wilkie said the notion that Iraq had weapons of mass destruction and co-operated with terrorists had been "a lie... No wonder John Howard andTony BlairandGeorge W Bushdo stand accused ofwar crimes".He linked the2005 Bali bombingsand the 2014 Lindt Cafe siege to Australia's participation in the invasion of Iraq.[18]
Political career, 2004–present
editCandidacy for Australian Greens (2004–2008)
editWilkie became a member of theAustralian Greensby 2004, and stood astheir candidatefor the seat ofBennelonginthat year's federal election,running against sitting Prime MinisterJohn Howard.[10]He was a supporter of the'Not happy, John!' campaignwhich ran during the election campaign.[19]Polling 16.37% of the primary vote, Wilkie achieved the fifth-highest vote percentage for a Greens candidate across the nation at the time. This result was a considerable increase from the Greens'previous electionresult in Bennelong of 4.03%. Although Wilkie's vote was nowhere near enough to win the seat, there was an overall swing of 3.18% against Howard, who achieved a primary vote of only 49.89%, which resulted in the seat being decided on preferences.[20]
Wilkie did not run again for Bennelong in the2007 federal election,instead running as the Greens' second Tasmanian candidate for theAustralian Senate,behind the party's federal leader,Bob Brown.[21]He was not elected.
He resigned from the party in 2008, criticising it for a lack of professionalism.[22]
Member of Parliament (2010–present)
edit- Gillard–Rudd government
Wilkie stood as an independent candidate in the stateDivision of Denison,based around central Hobart, in the2010 Tasmanian state election.[23]He won 8.44 per cent of first preference votes,[24]and was beaten by 315 votes by Liberal candidateElise Archerafter distribution of preferences.[25]
Wilkie stood as an independent for the federal Division of Denison, which has the same boundaries as the state division, in the2010 federal election[26]and won more than 20 per cent of the primary vote. TheAustralian Broadcasting Corporationdeclared Wilkie the winner on election night, predicting that Wilkie would be vaulted into second place on Green preferences and ultimately take the seat on Liberal preferences.[27]On the third count, he picked up enough Green preferences to put him in second place, ahead of the Liberal candidate. On the fourth count, more than 79 percent of the Liberal candidate's preferences flowed to Wilkie, allowing him to win the seat with just over 51 per cent of the two-candidate-preferred vote.[6]Reportedly, Wilkie benefited from what was perceived to have been a lacklustre campaign byLabor's candidate, Jonathan Jackson, the son of former longtime state Labor ministerJudy Jackson;Labor lost almost a quarter of its primary vote from 2007, and Labor theoretically tallied atwo-party voteof more than 65 percent.[28]
Following the election, he declared that he would back theLabor minority government,in return forJulia Gillard's administration committing $340 million to theRoyal Hobart Hospitaland a commitment to reduce problem gambling.[29]In contrast the Coalition offered A$1 billion in funding for the same hospital in their offer to Wilkie, which was perceived by Wilkie as "almost reckless".[30]Wilkie described this as being part of the evidence that Labor would better be able to offer a more stable, competent and ethical government than the Coalition. The agreement to support the government only extended to issues of supply andno confidencemotions.[29]
Wilkie was unexpectedly admitted to hospital on 12 November 2010 to have hisgall bladderremoved.[31][32]This did not interfere with his ability to attend Parliamentary sittings and he was present at the debate on same-sex marriage on 15 November, where he seconded the motion raised by Greens memberAdam Bandt.[33]
In April 2011, during push for gambling reform initiated by Wilkie,News Limitedmedia reported allegations by a former Duntroon army cadet that in 1983 Wilkie had forced junior cadets to salute toAdolf Hitleron the 50th anniversary of the latter's rise to power.[34]In response, Wilkie said he had been "involved in bastardisation of teenage army cadets" at Duntroon during the 1980s, and apologised for this "inappropriate behaviour", but could not recall the specific incident alleged.[35]With regard to the allegation and its publication, he accused pro-Pokiesadvocates of running a smear campaign against him.[35]
On 21 January 2012, Wilkie announced that he was withdrawing his support for the Labor government after it broke the agreement he had signed with Julia Gillard to implement mandatory pre-commitment for all poker machines by 2014. He stated that he would support the government's alternative plan to trial pre-commitment in the ACT and require that pre-commitment technology be installed in all poker machines built from 2013, but that this fell short of what he had been promised in return for supporting the government.[36]Gillard andMinister for Families, Housing, Community Services and Indigenous AffairsJenny Macklinargued that there was not enough support in theHouse of Representativesfor Wilkie's preferred option for it to be passed, and that they had been advised it was technically infeasible to implement mandatory commitment within the time frame he had specified.[37]In making his announcement, Wilkie stated that he would only support motions of no confidence against the government "in the event of serious misconduct" and would "consider budget measures on their merits".[37]
- Abbott-Turnbull government
Wilkie was re-elected in the2013 federal election,gaining a swing of 15 points to increase his majority to 65 percent.
In October 2014, Wilkie wrote to theInternational Criminal Court,seeking to prosecute Prime MinisterTony Abbottand the 19 members of his cabinet for crimes against humanity, with particular concerns relating to the treatment of asylum seekers.[38]
- Morrison government
In February 2020, Wilkie and fellow MPGeorge Christensentravelled to the UK to meet Australian Wikileaks founderJulian Assange.Both MPs called for Assange to be released.[39][40]
Political views
editIn the 2010 Tasmanian state election, Wilkie made the removal ofpoker machineshis primary campaign issue. He strongly opposed theGunns pulp millin the Tamar Valley. Wilkie is a supporter ofvoluntary euthanasia,provided that there are safeguards in place. He is also in favour ofsame-sex marriageand access to abortion. He supported aNational Broadband Network,and also opposed the Howard government'sWorkChoicesindustrial relations reforms.[41]
During Wilkie's maiden speech to federal parliament on 30 September 2010, he called for withdrawal of Australian troops fromAfghanistan.He said Australia should be more willing to say "no" more often to the United States, and that there could be no hope for peace in Afghanistan until foreign troops are withdrawn: "No-one should be fooled by the Australian Government's periodic efforts to tinker around the edges with Australia's commitment to Afghanistan" and that "The reality is that the best plan the Australian Government can come up with so far is simply to continue to support whatever the US Government comes up with and that alone is no plan—it's just reinforcing failure."
Wilkie's comments came amid opposition calls for more support for Australia's troops in Afghanistan. During his speech Wilkie also canvassed his push for legislation to protectwhistleblowers,measures to tackle problem gambling and a more humane approach to asylum seekers.[42]
In March 2011, he called Liberal MPsCory BernardiandScott Morrison"a disgrace to high office", calling on party leaderTony Abbottto sack them both. In a speech to the House of Representatives, he spoke of the "racism that eats at the Liberal Party".[43]
Pokies and pre-commitment
editWilkie campaigned heavily againstpoker machines(colloquially "pokies" ) at the2010 federal election,and immediately began forging ties with independent anti-pokies SenatorNick Xenophon.[44]Wilkie claimed that problem gamblers in Australia lose $5 billion each year on pokies.[45]The Labor government gave two commitments regarding pokies in exchange for Wilkie's support. The first was mandatory "pre-commitment"technology, which required a better to commit how much they were willing to bet before starting.[46]The second commitment was to introduce $1 maximum bet per spin machines that would not require pre-commitment. Wilkie argued these $1 maximum machines would be safer.[47]TheAbbottCoalitionopposed the plans, with Abbott saying "it is notLiberal Partypolicy "and it will be" expensive and ineffective ". According to polling, Wilkie's proposals were supported by a clear majority of voters across the spectrum.[48]Wilkie and Xenophon argued that "$12 billion a year is lost on the pokies. 100,000 Australians are problem gamblers and an additional 200,000 are significantly at risk of developing a full-blown addiction", and that the legislation is necessary to "[help] those who sometimes lose up to $1200 an hour on the pokies."[49]The Labor government withdrew their promised support for Wilkies's plan when their strength in parliament improved through a change of Speaker.[50]
The plan came under sustained attack from clubs, hotels and other businesses which financially benefit from pokies.[51]Xenophon responded by accusing them of misrepresenting plans and creating hype around the issue.[52]Strategy papers erroneously placed on the Clubs Queensland public website seemed to indicate that clubs were deliberately and purposefully exaggerating the impact that the pre-commitment reforms will have on their services.[53]The same papers outlined some strategies that the clubs could use to exploit loopholes in the proposed reform.[53]
TheNational Rugby League(NRL) aligned themselves with the campaign in opposing the pre-commitment plans, as did some prominentAustralian Football League(AFL) people. Commentators from theNine Networkgave planned political arguments without disclosure during commentary of a Semi-final NRL game, prompting theAustralian Communications and Media Authority(ACMA) to investigate, stating "Channel Nine broadcast political material without adequately identifying it as such during the NRL first preliminary final". One of the accused commentators stated that the remarks were a "directive from up top that it be read by at least somebody". Investigations were predicted to take months.[54][55][56][57]Andrew Demetriou,chief executive officer of the AFL, rejected suggestions that the AFL was joining Clubs Australia in their media campaign despite opposition to the plan by Collingwood president Eddie McGuire. Other high-profile club bosses including Jeff Kennett (Hawthorn) and David Smorgon (Bulldogs),[58]and also stated "The fellow from Clubs Australia, I don't even know his name, but please, stop talking on our behalf, just shut up, that'd be a good help".[59]Activist groupGetUp!attempted to counter the anti-pre-commitment campaign by running political commercials during the NRL grand final[60][61]but all three major commercial television stations refused to air more of them.[62][63][64]
On the 28th of November, Wilkie introduced a bill targetingloot boxesin video games, stating they "[groom children] for future gambling".[65]The bill would make all games targeting at children that include any form of in-game gambling be mandatorally ratedR18+, restricting their purchase to exclusively adults.
Personal life
editWilkie was married to a fellow army officerSimone Wilkie(née Burt) from 1991 to 2003.[66]
He married Kate (now Charlie[67]) Burton in 2004, with whom he has two daughters. However, they separated in 2012 and divorced the following year, with Wilkie citing stress from the 2010–2013 hung parliament as the main cause of the breakdown.[68]
Wilkie became engaged to Clare Ballingall in late 2018, and the pair married in June 2020.[69]
References
editNotes
edit- ^ab"Mr Andrew Wilkie MP".,Australian Parliament House Biographies; 19 August 2017
- ^"Independent MP Andrew Wilkie - Bring our troops home from Afghanistan".6 September 2016.;19 August 2017
- ^"Senior intelligence officer, Andrew Wilkie, resigns in protest".Australian Broadcasting Corporation.5 December 2023.;ABC Radio; AM Program; 12 March 2003.
- ^"PM – Andrew Wilkie discusses WMD doubts".Abc.net.au.Retrieved12 June2014.
- ^ab"Chilcot report: Andrew Wilkie blames Bali bombing, Lindt Cafe siege on Australia's Iraq War involvement".ABC News.7 July 2016.;ABC News; 7 July 2016
- ^ab"TAS DIVISION – DENISON".Election 2010 Virtual Tally Room: The official election results.Australian Electoral Commission. 2010. Archived fromthe originalon 27 August 2010.Retrieved27 August2010.
- ^McGookin, Daniel."St Gregory's College, Campbelltown: Top 20 alumni".Macarthur Chronicle.
- ^abWilkie, 2004 p. 2
- ^ab"Club Lunch – Speaker Andrew Wilkie"(PDF).Melbourne Press Club. 31 July 2003.
- ^ab"Former spy eyes greener pastures".The Sydney Morning Herald.10 December 2003.
- ^abcWilkie, 2004, back cover
- ^abc"Intelligence on Iraq's weapons of mass destruction"(PDF).Official Committee Hansard, Commonwealth of Australia. 22 August 2003.
- ^Bolt, Andrew (12 November 2008)."Not just a leak but a lie".heraldsun.Retrieved24 February2021.
- ^Wilkie, 2004
- ^"Chilcot report: John Howard defends decision to send Australian troops to Iraq".ABC News.7 July 2016.;ABC News online, 7 July 2016.
- ^"Lateline – 11/03/2003: Senior intelligence officer resigns over Iraq. Australian Broadcasting Corp".Abc.net.au. Archived fromthe originalon 15 July 2014.Retrieved12 June2014.
- ^"Senior intelligence officer, Andrew Wilkie, resigns in protest".Australian Broadcasting Corporation.5 December 2023.;ABC Radio, AM Program; 12 March 2003
- ^"Chilcot report: Andrew Wilkie blames Bali bombing, Lindt Cafe siege on Australia's Iraq War involvement".ABC News.7 July 2016.;ABC News online, 7 July 2016.
- ^Hudson, Phillip (10 October 2004)."Four in a row for Coalition".The Age.Canberra, Australia.Retrieved29 August2010.
- ^"House of Representatives, NSW Division – Bennelong: First Preferences".Virtual Tally Room (results.aec.gov.au).Australian Electoral Commission.9 November 2005.Archivedfrom the original on 13 August 2010.Retrieved3 February2019.
- ^"Greens announce Tasmanian Senate ticket".The Age.Melbourne, Australia. 16 February 2007.Archivedfrom the original on 20 October 2012.Retrieved29 August2010.
- ^Duffy, Conor (26 August 2010)."Who is Andrew Wilkie?".ABC News Online.Australian Broadcasting Corporation.Archivedfrom the original on 29 August 2010.Retrieved29 August2010.
- ^Neales, Sue (20 March 2009)."Wilkie's Denison punt".The Mercury.
- ^"Division of Denison – first preference figures".,Tasmanian Electoral Commission
- ^"Tasmanian Electoral Commission".Electoral.tas.gov.au. 8 April 2010.Retrieved12 June2014.
- ^"Voting in the electorate of Denison (tas), 2010 federal election".Australian Electoral Commission.10 August 2010.
- ^Green, Antony(24 August 2010)."Distributing Preferences in Denison".Australian Broadcasting Corporation.Archivedfrom the original on 25 August 2010.Retrieved25 August2010.
- ^"Denison – Australia Votes | Federal Election 2013 (Australian Broadcasting Corporation)".Abc.net.au.Retrieved12 June2014.
- ^abRodgers, Emma (2 September 2010)."Wilkie backs Gillard government".ABC News.
- ^Tim Leslie (3 September 2010)."Abbott's 'reckless' offer pushed Wilkie to Labor".Australia: ABC.Retrieved19 November2011.
- ^"Wilkie in hospital for gall bladder operation".Adelaidenow.com.au. AAP. 12 November 2010.Retrieved19 November2011.
- ^"Wilkie recovering from surgery".Herald Sun.12 November 2010.Retrieved19 November2011.
- ^"House of Representatives debates gay marriage".Australianpolitics.com. 15 November 2010.Retrieved19 November2011.
- ^"Wilkie admits bastardising Duntroon cadets".15 April 2011.Retrieved15 April2011.
- ^abRule, Andrew (15 April 2011)."Andrew Wilkie caught up in Nazi salute allegation".Retrieved15 April2011.
- ^"Wilkie withdraws support over broken pokies deal".ABC News.21 January 2012.Retrieved21 January2012.
- ^abPeatling, Stephanie (21 January 2012)."PM unveils compromise deal over pokies reform".The Sydney Morning Herald.Retrieved21 January2012.
- ^"Andrew Wilkie seeks to prosecute Abbott Government over 'inhumane' treatment of asylum seekers".News.com.au. 22 October 2014.Retrieved26 June2018.
- ^"Julian Assange suffering from psychological torture, says George Christensen, Andrew Wilkie".18 February 2020.
- ^"Andrew Wilkie and George Christensen in London to visit Julian Assange, as Jeremy Corbyn says UK view on extradition is shifting - ABC News".ABC News.17 February 2020.
- ^"Andrew Wilkie – Independent Candidate for Denison".Archived fromthe originalon 24 August 2010.Retrieved29 August2010.
- ^"Wilkie takes stand against Afghan war".ABC News.30 September 2010.Archivedfrom the original on 3 October 2010.Retrieved1 October2010.
- ^Kelly, Joe (1 March 2011)."Independent Andrew Wilkie calls on Abbott to 'lance the boil' of racism in his party".The Australian.Archivedfrom the original on 6 March 2011.Retrieved2 March2011.
- ^"Wilkie, Xenophon team up against pokies: ABC The World Today 26 August 2010".Australia: ABC. 2 October 1980.Retrieved19 November2011.
- ^"Poker Machines".AndrewWilkie.org. Archived fromthe originalon 17 November 2011.Retrieved19 November2011.
- ^"Wilkie's Gamble: ABC Four Corners 20 June 2011".Australia: ABC. 20 June 2011. Archived fromthe originalon 2 September 2011.Retrieved19 November2011.
- ^Cowboy (4 September 2011)."Andrew Wilkie complains about opposition to his poker machine plans: The International 1 September 2011".International.to. Archived fromthe originalon 28 March 2012.Retrieved19 November2011.
- ^"Liberal voters support pokies crackdown".Herald Sun.Australia. 11 October 2011.Retrieved19 November2011.
- ^"Its a Big Fat Lie".Archived fromthe originalon 5 October 2011.Retrieved3 October2011.
- ^"Wilkie withdraws support over broken pokies deal – ABC News (Australian Broadcasting Corporation)".ABC News.Abc.net.au. 21 January 2012.Retrieved12 June2014.
- ^"Wilkie is fearless on pokies says Xenophon: NineMSN 26 September 2011".News.ninemsn.com.au. Archived fromthe originalon 7 October 2012.Retrieved19 November2011.
- ^Editor, State (26 September 2011)."Mr X hits back at pokies 'lies'".AdelaideNow.Retrieved19 November2011.
{{cite web}}
:|last=
has generic name (help) - ^ab"Clubs Australia private strategy paper calls for trailer-mounted ATMs to circumvent Federal Government's poker machine reforms".News Ltd. 9 October 2011.Retrieved9 October2011.
- ^clubsnsw (23 September 2011)."Channel 9 support campaign against MPC during NRL semi-final broadcast".YouTube.Retrieved19 November2011.[dead YouTube link]
- ^Maiden, Samantha (2 October 2011)."Andrew Wilkie blows the whistle on Channel Nine: Daily Telegraph 2 October 2011".The Daily Telegraph.Australia.Retrieved19 November2011.
- ^"Media watchdog to probe NRL commentators".Sydney Morning Herald.4 October 2011.Retrieved19 November2011.
- ^"Channel Nine investigated over pokies comments: ABC 4 October 2011".ABC News.Australia: ABC. 4 October 2011.Retrieved19 November2011.
- ^"AFL boss rejects talk of pokie reform campaign: ABC 26 September 2011".Australia: ABC. 26 September 2011.Retrieved19 November2011.
- ^"Shut up, AFL tells pokies campaigners: SMH 26 September 2011".Sydney Morning Herald.26 September 2011.Retrieved19 November2011.
- ^"GetUp to air pokies ad during grand final: SMH 2 October 2011".Sydney Morning Herald.2 October 2011.Retrieved19 November2011.
- ^getupaustralia.""Rob U Blind – Pokies", by GetUp ".YouTube.Retrieved19 November2011.[dead YouTube link]
- ^Willingham, Richard (16 May 2012)."Networks refuse to air anti-pokie ads".The Canberra Times.Retrieved19 March2013.
- ^getupaustralia.""The Pokies People", by GetUp ".YouTube.Retrieved19 March2013.[dead YouTube link]
- ^"Gambling With Lives".The Pokies People.Retrieved19 March2013.
- ^'Groomed for future gambling:' Andrew Wilkie tables bill targeting in-game gambling,27 November 2022,retrieved1 December2022
- ^Sullivan, Leanne, ed. (2013).Who's Who in Australia 2013(XLIX ed.). Melbourne: Crown Content. p. 2405.ISBN978-1-74095-190-6.ISSN0810-8226.
- ^Denholm, Matthew (9 December 2019)."Andrew Wilkie office ban spurs transgender row".The Australian.Retrieved18 April2024.
- ^"Independent Andrew Wilkie says he lost his marriage to Kate Burton because of the stress of the hung parliament".couriermail.Retrieved12 June2014.
- ^"Andrew Wilkie marries Clare Ballingall in Hobart garden ceremony".The Mercury.7 June 2020.Retrieved26 May2022.
Sources
edit- Wilkie, Andrew (2004).Axis of Deceit.Melbourne:Schwarz Publishing.ISBN0-9750769-2-2.(The story of the intelligence officer who risked all to tell the truth aboutWMDandIraq:cover)
External links
edit- Official website
- Search or browseHansardforAndrew Wilkieat OpenAustralia.org