Nicholas Stuart
Nicholas Stuart (born 29 March 1961) is a columnist with The Canberra Times and the author of three books about Australian politics.
His unauthorised biography of Kevin Rudd[1] has been described by Monash University's Senior Lecturer in Economics Nick Economou as "requisite reading for observers of Australian national politics".[2] The book has been assessed as a fair, balanced and generally positive treatment of Rudd.[citation needed] Within a month of the election of the new Labor government Stuart published another 96,000 word book analysing the last term of the Howard government and identifying the significant factors that resulted in the change of government at the 2007 election.[3] This has received similar positive reviews in the Sydney Morning Herald, The Australian, and The Age newspapers.[citation needed]
Less than one month after the fall of Kevin Rudd Stuart published a third book; Rudd's Way.[4] This book describes reasons why the ALP decided to remove Rudd from the leadership, making him the only successful Labor prime minister never to face re-election.
Stuart's newspaper column specialises in coverage of strategic and defence issues[5] reflecting an interest developed after studying for an MA in War Studies at King's College London in 1984. When he returned to Australia the next year Stuart became a cadet radio news journalist with the Australian Broadcasting Corporation, gaining wide reporting experience. He later reported on politics and international events for the Radio Current Affairs programs "AM" and "PM", before moving to the ABC TV environmental program "A Question of Survival". He covered the aftermath of the 1989 Tienanmen protests in China before becoming the ABC's Indochina Correspondent, based in Bangkok.
Stuart was critically injured in a vehicle accident in Bangkok in late 1990 when he was left in a coma.[6] He later returned to work in Bangkok and covered the 1992 demonstrations that led to the fall of the military-backed government of the country. He received a High Commendation issued by the Walkley Award judges that year. However, the ABC believed he had not properly recovered from his accident and was recalled to Australia. After working for a period in the Corporation's International Operations division, he later left the ABC.
Stuart accompanied his wife, Catherine McGrath, to Singapore where she was based as an ABC correspondent in 1995. When they returned to Canberra, Stuart became a columnist with The Canberra Times.
In 2015 Stuart became a Press Fellow at Wolfson College, Cambridge.[7]
References
- ^ Nicholas Stuart (2007). Kevin Rudd: an unauthorised political biography. Melbourne: Scribe. ISBN 978-1-921215-58-2.
- ^ Nick Economou (2007). "Kevin Rudd: An Unauthorised Political Biography by Nicholas Stuart" (PDF). Reviews in Australian Studies. 2 (8).
- ^ Nicholas Stuart (2008). What Goes Up Behind the 2007 Election. Melbourne: Scribe. ISBN 978-1-921215-86-5.
- ^ Nicholas Stuart (2010). Rudd's Way: November 2007 - June 2010. Melbourne: Scribe. ISBN 978-1-921640-57-5.
- ^ Nicholas Stuart (17 July 2007). "An ill-equipped military raises doubts about future". The Canberra Times.
- ^ Norman Swan (21 December 1998). "The Health Report". ABC Radio National.
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