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Ian Sinclair

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Ian Sinclair
File:Iansinclair.jpg
42nd Australian Defence Minister
In office
19821983
Preceded byJim Killen
Succeeded byGordon Scholes
Constituency New England
Personal details
Born (1929-06-19) 19 June 1929 (age 95)
Sydney, New South Wales
Political partyNational Party of Australia
SpouseRosemary

Rt Hon. Ian McCahon Sinclair, AC, PC (born 10 June 1929), is a former Australian politician and leader of the National Party of Australia.

Sinclair was born in Sydney, New South Wales, the son of a suburban accountant. He was educated at Knox Grammar School and at the University of Sydney, where he graduated in arts and law. He practised law in Sydney, but soon developed an interest in farming, and acquired a property near Tamworth in the New England region of northern New South Wales. In 1956, he married Margaret Tarrant, with whom he had three children. After the early death of his wife, in 1970, he married again, to former Miss Australia 1961, Rosemary Fenton, with whom he has one son. His eldest daughter, Fiona, is married to the former Australian politician Peter King.

Political career

In 1961 Sinclair became a Country Party member of the New South Wales Legislative Council, and at the 1963 election, he was elected to the House of Representatives for the Division of New England.

In 1965 Sinclair was promoted to the ministry, becoming Minister for Social Services in the Liberal-Country Party coalition government of Robert Menzies. In 1968, he became Minister for Shipping and Transport. He and Doug Anthony were seen as the most likely successors to the veteran Country Party leader John McEwen, but when McEwen retired in 1971, it was Anthony who was elected party Leader, while Sinclair was elected Deputy Leader, becoming at the same time Minister for Primary Industry.

After spending the three years of the Whitlam Labor government in opposition, Sinclair again became Minister for Primary Industry in 1975, in the Fraser government. He held this position until 1979, when he was forced to resign from the ministry after being charged with forgery. The charges arose from a dispute over his father's will, on which he was accused of having forged his father's signature. He was acquitted of these charges in August 1980, and then returned to the ministry as Minister for Special Trade Representations. After the 1980 elections he became Minister for Communications. In May 1982, he became Minister for Defence, a post he held until the defeat of the Fraser government at the 1983 election.

Party leader

In January 1984 Anthony resigned the leadership of the National Country Party (as the Country Party had been renamed in 1975), and Sinclair succeeded him. Under his leadership the party was renamed the National Party of Australia (NPA), reflecting the need to broaden the party's base beyond its declining rural constituency. The party aggressively challenged the Liberals in urban seats, but had little success except in Queensland.

Sinclair also tried to position the NPA as the party of social conservatism. During the 1984 election he created a controversy by blaming the appearance of AIDS on the Hawke Labor government's policy of "condoning" homosexuality. Sinclair had a poor relationship with Liberal leader Andrew Peacock, and supported his more conservative rival, John Howard. When Howard became Liberal leader in 1985, the two formed a close partnership.

This alliance was disrupted by the determination of the extremely conservative Queensland branch of the NPA and its leader, Premier Joh Bjelke-Petersen, to seize the national political agenda. The Queensland NPA forced the federal party to break off the coalition with the Liberals, and launched a "Joh for Canberra" campaign with the aim of making the 76-year-old Bjelke-Petersen Prime Minister at the 1987 election.

This campaign was a complete failure: the Hawke government was re-elected in July 1987, the NPA lost seats, particularly in Queensland, and Sinclair and Howard both found their leaderships under pressure.

In May 1989, there were simultaneous, co-ordinated leadership coups in both parties, with Peacock displacing Howard as Liberal leader and Charles Blunt replacing Sinclair. When Blunt lost his seat at the 1990 election, Sinclair made a determined attempt to regain the NPA leadership, but was defeated by Tim Fischer, and retired to the back-bench. By this time he was the longest-serving member of the House of Representatives. He was also the last serving Australian politician to be a member of the Privy Council of the United Kingdom, entitling him to the prefix "The Right Honourable".

Aged nearly 70 and having had heart problems for some time, Sinclair announced his intention to retire at the 1998 election. In February 1998 Howard appointed Sinclair as Chairman of the Constitutional Convention which debated the possibility of Australia becoming a republic, a role in which he won praise from all sides. When the Speaker of the House, Robert Halverson, suddenly resigned in March, Sinclair was elected to replace him.

Sinclair made an excellent Speaker, and tried to persuade the NPA to allow him to stand again in New England, but they had already chosen another candidate and Sinclair had no choice but to retire, which he did at the October elections. Sinclair is now the President of AUSTCARE, an international, non-profit, independent aid organisation.

References

Political offices
Preceded by Minister for Social Services
1965 – 1968
Succeeded by
Preceded by Minister for Shipping and Transport
1968 – 1971
Succeeded by
Preceded by Minister for Primary Industry
1971 – 1972
Succeeded by
Preceded by Minister for Primary Industry
1975 – 1979
Succeeded by
Preceded by Minister for Northern Australia
1975
Succeeded by
Preceded by Minister for Special Trade Representations
1979 – 1980
Position abolished
Preceded by Minister for Communications
1980 – 1982
Succeeded by
Preceded by Minister for Defence
1982 – 1983
Succeeded by
Parliament of Australia
Preceded by Member for New England
1963 – 1998
Succeeded by
Preceded by Longest serving member of the
Australian House of Representatives

1990 - 1998
Succeeded by
Preceded by Speaker of the House of Representatives
1998
Succeeded by
Party political offices
Preceded by Leader of the National Country Party/
National Party of Australia

1984 – 1989
Succeeded by


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