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Wilson Tuckey

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Wilson Tuckey
Minister for Regional Services, Territories and Local Government
In office
25 January 2002 – 7 October 2003
Prime MinisterJohn Howard
Preceded byIan Macdonald
Succeeded byIan Campbell
Minister for Forestry and Conservation
In office
21 October 1998 – 26 November 2001
Prime MinisterJohn Howard
Preceded byNew title
Succeeded byIan Macdonald
Member of theAustralian Parliament
forO'Connor
In office
18 October 1980 – 21 August 2010
Preceded byNew division
Succeeded byTony Crook
Mayor of Carnarvon Shire
In office
23 May 1964 – 5 June 1971
Personal details
Born(1935-07-10)10 July 1935(age 89)
Perth, Western Australia
Political partyLiberal
NicknameIronbar

Charles Wilson TuckeyOAM(born 10 July 1935) is an Australian politician who was a member of theHouse of Representativesfrom 1980 to 2010, representing the seat ofO'Connorin Western Australia for theLiberal Party.He was a minister in theHoward government.

Early life

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Tuckey was born inPerth.Before entering the Federal Parliament, he was a businessman and hotelier.

From 23 May 1964 until 1 March 1965, Tuckey was the last mayor of the town ofCarnarvon;after that date the Town was amalgamated into theShire of Carnarvon.Tuckey went on to serve as the first Shire president from 22 May 1965 until June 1971. Thereafter he was a councillor for the Shire's Commercial Ward until 1979.

In 1967, while employed as apublicanin Carnarvon, Tuckey was convicted of assault after striking anAboriginalman with a length of steel cable and fined $50.[1][2][3][4]The man was allegedly being held down by Tuckey's brother at the time.[5]Tuckey has had the nickname "Ironbar" ever since.

Political career

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In 1979, Tuckey was endorsed by theLiberal Party,ahead of the1980 election,as its candidate for the then-new seat of O'Connor, covering a large section of rural Western Australia. The demographics of the seat suggested that it should have been aNational Countryseat, even though it was notionally a comfortably safe Liberal seat. Nevertheless, in 1980 a split between the federal andstate branchesof the National Country Party allowed Tuckey to win onLaborpreferences.[6][7]

Tuckey was one of the most controversial figures in Australian federal politics. In 1985 he taunted the then Labor Treasurer,Paul Keating,in Parliament about a former girlfriend called "Christine", leading Keating to call him "a piece of criminal garbage".[8]In one notorious exchange, Tuckey told Keating: "You are an idiot, you are a hopelessnong",to which Keating replied:" Shut up! Sit down and shut up, you pig… Why do you not shut up, you clown?… This man has a criminal intellect… this clown continues to interject in perpetuity ".[9]The enraged Keating demanded thatJohn Howard,who the previous year had become Leader of the Opposition, discipline Tuckey; but Howard refused. Keating then promised to make Howard "wear his leadership like acrown of thorns".Keating and Howard's relationship, previously a civil one, deteriorated to the point where the two men refused to speak to one another. Reportedly, the last time they talked privately was when Keating stormed into Howard's office, furiously berated him for not disciplining Tuckey, and walked out.[2]

Tuckey was a member of the Opposition shadow ministry from 1984 to 1989 and again from 1993 to 1996. He was DeputyManager of Opposition Business in the Housefrom 1988 to 1989 and 1993 to 1994.

In 1989, a group of Liberal parliamentarians, including Tuckey, plotted to remove Howard from the Opposition leadership and give the position back toAndrew Peacock(who had already held it from 1983 to 1985). After the plan succeeded, Tuckey boasted about his actions in aFour Cornersinterview, which privately infuriated Howard.[10]

Tuckey addressed anAIDSconference and opened by saying "you don't catch AIDS, you let somebody give it to you".[1][11]

Frontbencher

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As Minister for Forestry and Conservation from 1998 to 2001, Tuckey angered conservation groups through his support for the forestry industry. In 2002, he blamed the environmentalist movement for Australia's severebushfireproblem, saying that their opposition tocontrolled burningin national parks increased the risk of fires.[1][12]

In a reshuffle after the2001 election,Tuckey was madeMinister for Regional Services, Territories and Local Government.His ministerial demise came in August 2003, when it was revealed that Tuckey had written toSouth AustralianPolice ministerPatrick Conlon,on ministerial letterhead, asking Conlon to "review" his son's conviction on a traffic charge.[1]Howard said that Tuckey's actions were foolish but refused to dismiss him. Tuckey resigned shortly afterwards and returned to the backbench.[13]

Backbencher

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Tuckey in 2007

In 2005, when the Australian parliament passed a motion asking Singaporean authorities thatVan Tuong Nguyennot be executed for drug smuggling, Tuckey was the only member of parliament who refused to support the motion.[14]

Tuckey was often quoted in the media as supporting free markets and less government intervention in the economy. He is also well known for criticising theNational Partyon a number of issues. He was the most outspoken critic of theAWBin Federal Parliament, and he led the push for this board to be stripped of its export monopoly for wheat. Tuckey labelled National Party politicians who supported the single-desk system as "drongos".[15]He also labelled National Party senatorBarnaby Joycea "lightweight" for arguing in favour of foreign ownership restrictions onMedibank Privateafter privatization.[16]

In August 2006, Tuckey had a public argument with Labor leaderKim Beazleyover new immigration laws, ending with Tuckey calling Beazley a "fat so and so".[1][17]A year later, Tuckey sent a fax toJohn Howardand several Liberal MPs suggesting the Prime Minister relinquish the leadership.[18]

Queensland Aboriginal activistSam Watson,in January 2008, branded Tuckey an "extreme racist" after Tuckey had publicly deplored the decision to display traditional dancers from one of the Aboriginal tribes which historically resides near Parliament House at the opening of Federal Parliament. Watson concluded, "Mr Tuckey and his extremist racist views really do belong to another generation".[19]

On 13 February 2008, Tuckey walked out during the opening of the 42nd Australian Federal Parliament immediately after prayers, and pointedly before the Prime MinisterKevin Ruddmade a motion of apology to theStolen Generation.He was one of six Liberal MPs (including fellow West Australian MPsLuke Simpkins,Dennis Jensenand the lateDon Randallas well asSophie Mirabellaand the lateAlby Schultz) to leave the house in protest to the apology to theStolen Generations,thereby boycotting the motion.[1][20]On the steps of parliament, Tuckey was sarcastic about what the apology would achieve for indigenous people:

"I'm there to say hallelujah. Tomorrow there'll be no petrol sniffing, tomorrow little girls can sleep in their beds without any concern — it's all fixed. The Rudd spin will fix it all. I've read it, I'm convinced. I think it's wonderful".[20]

The following May, Tuckey was expelled from the house for 24 hours after breaching standards. His remarks against the Speaker arose during a heated question time in relation to theRudd government's 'Fuel Watch Scheme'.[21]On 24 September 2008, Tuckey was again expelled from the house, this time for one hour, for an outburst during House of Representatives Question Time.[citation needed]

In March 2010, Tuckey said that acknowledging traditional landowners at official events was a "farce" and that he had "never thanked anyone for the right to be on the soil that is Australian".[22]

Defeat

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From 1983 to 2007, Tuckey held O'Connor without serious difficulty, usually taking between 62 and 75 percent of thetwo-party preferredvote. At the2007 federal election,Tuckey was reelected with 46 percent of the primary vote and a two-party margin of 67 percent against Labor.

However, at the2010 federal election,Tuckey was defeated byNationals WAcandidateTony Crook.[23][24]He suffered a post-redistribution primary vote swing of 10 percent and a two-candidate swing of 20 percent, finishing on a primary vote of 38 percent and a two-candidate vote of 46 percent against Crook. He was 75 years old at the time of his defeat, making him the oldest sitting MP.[25]

Tuckey broke his self-imposed silence after the election, verbally attacking Crook on a range of fronts.[26]Tuckey described Crook as "a nobody who would be lucky to have his relatives turn up to hear his maiden speech in parliament".[27]

In 2009, the year before his defeat he said he might seek to become the longest serving member of parliament by breaking the record held by former Prime MinisterBilly Hughes.[28]However his defeat in 2010 dashed hopes of him achieving this record as it ended his 30 years in Parliament, nowhere near the 51 years served by Hughes from 1901 until his death in 1952.

Tuckey was awarded theMedal of the Order of Australiain the2024 Australia Day Honoursfor "service to the people and Parliament of Australia".[29]

References

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  1. ^abcdefFeneley, Rick (28 August 2010)."Nasty and deserved end for our wild Uncle Wilson".The Sydney Morning Herald.Fairfax Media.Retrieved2 September2010.
  2. ^abCrabb, Annabel (23 August 2003)."Heckler from hell lives to torment another day".The Age.Fairfax Media.Retrieved16 December2007.
  3. ^"Tuckey's dreams in ruins".Australian Associated Press.22 August 2010.
  4. ^"PM takes his feather duster to 'Iron Bar'".Sunday Mail.24 August 2003.
  5. ^"Tough tactics".Sun Herald.26 May 1991.
  6. ^"O'Connor - Australia Votes Federal Election 2013".Abc.net.au.Retrieved21 March2017.
  7. ^"LEGISLATIVE ELECTION OF 18 OCTOBER 1980"(TXT).
  8. ^Papers on Parliament No 34 – Chapter 14Archived11 August 2008 at theWayback MachineParliament of Australia,Senate
  9. ^Madigan, Michael (27 February 2009)."Barking, biting dog House".Winnipeg Free Press.Retrieved22 August2010.
  10. ^Brent, Peter (15 February 2012)."Pointless hypothetical polling".Mumble.The Australian.Retrieved30 May2013.
  11. ^"O'Connor: 2010 Federal Election 2010".ABC News Online.Australian Broadcasting Corporation.2010.Retrieved10 September2010.
  12. ^Woodford, James (6 September 2003)."Lessons from the burning bush".The Sydney Morning Herald.Fairfax Media.
  13. ^Seccombe, Mike (20 August 2003)."Tuckey's worrying version of family values".The Sydney Morning Herald.Fairfax Media.Retrieved16 December2007.
  14. ^Peake, Ross (1 November 2005). "Tuckey alone against clemency for Nguyen".Canberra Times.Fairfax Media.p. 2.
  15. ^Overington, Caroline;Hart, Cath (19 October 2006). "Coalition split on AWB monopoly".The Australian.News Limited.
  16. ^Cronin, Danielle (6 September 2006). "Fears cost of health insurance will rise".The Canberra Times.Fairfax Media.
  17. ^"'Iron Bar' wins on points: PM ".The Age.Fairfax Media.10 August 2006.Retrieved16 December2007.
  18. ^Coorey, Phillip (15 August 2007)."Tuckey blames staff for fax".The Sydney Morning Herald.Fairfax Media.Retrieved16 December2007.
  19. ^"Tuckey labelled racist over Indigenous dance comments".ABC News.Australian Broadcasting Corporation.28 January 2008.Retrieved28 January2008.
  20. ^abGrattan, Michelle;Schubert, Misha (14 February 2008)."Rudd staff rebuked for shunning Nelson".The Age.Fairfax Media.Retrieved14 February2008.
  21. ^"Fireworks as Wilson Tuckey is kicked out of the House".Wilson Tuckey.May 2008.Australian Broadcasting Corporation.ABC1.Archivedfrom the original on 21 December 2021.
  22. ^Rodgers, Emma (15 March 2010)."Aboriginal recognition a face: Tuckey".ABC News.Retrieved10 September2010.
  23. ^Barrass, Tony (21 August 2010)."'Fat lady is warming up' for Wilson Tuckey ".The Australian.News Limited.Retrieved22 August2010.
  24. ^"Tuckey's dreams in ruins".The Sydney Morning Herald.Fairfax Media.22 August 2010.Retrieved22 August2010.
  25. ^O'Connor 2010 federal election results: AEC
  26. ^"Tuckey refuses to be gracious in defeat".ABC News (Australia).9 September 2010.Retrieved1 June2023.
  27. ^O'Brien, Amanda (9 September 2010)."Wilson Tuckey exits politics with a spray at nationals MP Tony Crook".The Australian.Retrieved1 June2023.
  28. ^"Wilson Tuckey vows to beat off challenger".ABC News (Australia).21 August 2009.Retrieved1 June2023.
  29. ^"The Honourable Charles Wilson Tuckey".Australian Honours Search Facility.Retrieved25 January2024.
[edit]
Political offices
New title Minister for Forestry and Conservation
1998–2001
Succeeded by
Preceded by Minister for Regional Services,
Territories and Local Government

2001–2003
Succeeded by
Parliament of Australia
New division Member for O'Connor
1980–2010
Succeeded by