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John Rau

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John Rau
Rau in 2015
Deputy Premier of South Australia
In office
7 February 2011 – 19 March 2018
PremierMike Rann
Jay Weatherill
Preceded byKevin Foley
Succeeded byVickie Chapman
Deputy Leader of the South Australian
Labor Party
In office
7 February 2011 – 9 April 2018
LeaderMike Rann
Jay Weatherill
Preceded byKevin Foley
Succeeded bySusan Close
Attorney-General of South Australia
In office
25 March 2010 – 19 March 2018
PremierMike Rann
Jay Weatherill
Preceded byMichael Atkinson
Succeeded byVickie Chapman
Member of theSouth Australian Parliament
forEnfield
In office
9 February 2002 – 17 December 2018
Preceded byNew District
Succeeded byAndrea Michaels
Personal details
Born
John Robert Rau

(1959-03-20)20 March 1959(age 65)
Adelaide,South Australia, Australia
Political partyAustralian Labor Party (SA)

John Robert RauSC(born 20 March 1959) is an Australian barrister and politician. He was the 12thDeputy Premier of South Australiafrom 2011 to 2018 and 48thAttorney-General of South Australiafrom 2010 to 2018 for theSouth Australian Branch of the Australian Labor Partyin theWeatherillcabinet.Rau was the Labor member of theHouse of Assemblyseat ofEnfieldfrom the2002 election[1]until announcing his intention to retire from Parliament on 10 December 2018,[2]and submitting his resignation on 17 December 2018.[3]

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Rau was admitted as a solicitor and barrister of theSupreme Court of South Australiain 1981. He worked as an adviser toHawkegovernment ministersMick Young,Michael TateandNeal Blewettfrom 1985 to 1988. He served as a Commonwealth nominee on the South Australian Legal Services Commission. He has also served on the ALP State and National Executives.

Before his service as a political adviser, Rau worked as a solicitor at Duncan Groom, Carabellas & Hannon. From 1988 to 1997 he worked as a solicitor and barrister at the firm of Johnston Withers, becoming a partner. Rau joined the independent bar and Murray Chambers in 1997.[citation needed]

Rau has appeared as counsel in the South Australian Industrial Relations Commission, the South Australian Industrial Relations Court, the Workers Compensation Tribunal, the Supreme Court of South Australia (including once as Attorney-General), the District Court of South Australia and the Federal Court of Australia.

Political career

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His first political experience as a Labor candidate occurred at the1993 federal election,when he stood for theDivision of Hindmarsh,where he was narrowly defeated byLiberal PartycandidateChris Gallusby 1.6 percent.

Prior to the2002 state election,Rau contested Labor preselection for the safe seat of Enfield. The seat had previously beenRoss Smith,held byRalph Clarke,who had recently been deposed as the party's deputy leader. The local party branch chose Clarke who received 60 of 74 votes. However, the party's state executive stepped in and installed Rau as the pre-selected candidate. Clarke ran as an independent Labor candidate, receiving a respectable 23 percent of the vote; however, Clarke narrowly fell short of overtaking Rau and winning the seat on Liberal preferences. Rau easily won the seat with a 35.9 percent primary and 65.9 percent two-party vote. He is aligned with Labor's right faction.[1]

Rau gained publicity in 2004 over his involvement in theReal Estate Industry – Reformbill, which was designed in an attempt to stop industry practices such as dummy bidding at auctions.

The2006 state electionsaw Rau retain Enfield with a 63.4 percent primary and 74.5 percent two-party vote. At the2010 state election,Rau suffered a swing to finish with a 52.6 percent primary and 60.5 percent two-party vote.

Rau became Attorney-General whenMichael Atkinsonstepped down from the position following the 2010 election.[4]Like his predecessor, Rau has also been described as asocial conservative.[5]

Rau expressed approval for the introduction of an R18+ video games classification following the resignation of Atkinson.[6]The issue had been one for which his predecessor Atkinson received significant media attention.[7]Rau appeared to be taking a different view to his predecessor and considered allowing an introduction of an R18+ classification.[8][9]

In February 2011, Rau was elevated to Deputy Premier following the resignation of Kevin Foley from the position.[10]

On 22 November 2016, Rau was appointed aSenior Counselby theSupreme Court of South Australia.[11]

In addition toDeputy PremierandAttorney-General,in theCabinet of South AustraliaRau held the ministerial portfolios with responsibility for justice reform, planning, industrial relations, child protection reform, the public sector, consumer and business services, and with responsibility for theCity of Adelaide.[12]

Personal life

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Rau attendedHenley High School.[13]

References

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  1. ^abOwen, Michael (23 March 2010)."Left MP Tony Piccolo refuses to back move on Right's Kevin Foley".The Australian.Retrieved20 January2016.
  2. ^FormerFormer South Australian deputy premier John Rau quits ParliamentABC News,10 December 2018. Retrieved 10 December 2018.
  3. ^Former Member of Parliament DetailsRetrieved 18 December 2018.
  4. ^Gary Rivett (23 March 2010)."Liberals concede as Rann outlines new team".ABC News Online.Australian Broadcasting Corporation.Retrieved23 March2010.
  5. ^Rann's pillars crumble: The Advertiser 12 November 2010
  6. ^Andrew Ramadge (25 March 2010)."John Rau open to R18+ rating, says campaigner".news.com.au.News Limited. Archived fromthe originalon 22 January 2016.Retrieved27 April2010.
  7. ^"ALP 'pledge' to ban R+ games".The Advertiser.News Limited. 5 April 2010.Retrieved7 April2010.
  8. ^SA takes softer line on R18+ game rating: ABC 6 December 2010
  9. ^"South Australian Attorney-General John Rau opens door to R18+ games rating: News.com.au 6 December 2010".Archived fromthe originalon 5 March 2014.Retrieved11 December2010.
  10. ^"John Rau is new SA deputy premier".Adelaide Now.Australian Associated Press. 7 February 2011.Retrieved7 February2011.
  11. ^John Rau: Attorney-General named senior counsel in SA Supreme Court appointments: ABC News 22 November 2016
  12. ^Cabinet of South Australia: Premier.sa.gov.auArchived21 September 2015 at theWayback Machine
  13. ^"Premier Jay Weatherill goes back to school".News.com.au.Retrieved23 July2014.
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South Australian House of Assembly
New district Member of Parliament
forEnfield

2002–2018
Succeeded by
Political offices
Preceded by Minister for Tourism
2010–2011
Succeeded by
Preceded by Attorney-General of South Australia
2010–2018
Succeeded by
Preceded by Deputy Premier of South Australia
2011–2018
Preceded byas Minister for Business Services and Consumers Minister for Consumer and Business Services
2016–2018
Succeeded byasAttorney-General of South Australia
New office Minister for Justice Reform
2014–2018
Minister for Child Protection Reform
2015–2018
Succeeded byas Minister for Child Protection
Preceded byas Minister for City of Adelaide Minister for Urban Development, Planning and the City of Adelaide
2011
Succeeded byas Minister for Housing and Urban Development
Succeeded by
Himself
as Minister for Planning
Preceded by
Himself
as Minister for Urban Development, Planning
and the City of Adelaide
Minister for Planning
2011–2018
Succeeded by
Preceded by Minister for Industrial Relations
2013–2018
Succeeded byasTreasurer of South Australia
Preceded by Minister for the Public Sector
2016–2018
Preceded by Minister for Housing and Urban Development
2014–2016
Succeeded by
Party political offices
Preceded by Deputy Leader of theAustralian Labor Party (South Australian Branch)
2011–2018
Succeeded by