ANDREW BARTLETT

Bartlett speaks at the launch of his campaign for re-election to the Australian Senate in July 2007

'Andrew John Julian Bartlett' (born 4 August 1964), Australian politician, has been a member of the Australian Senate for the state of Queensland since 1997, representing the Australian Democrats, of which he is Deputy Leader and Party Whip.

Contents
Early life and background
Service in the Australian Senate
Leader of the Australian Democrats
2004 Federal election to present
References
External links

Early life and background


Bartlett was born in Brisbane, where he has lived all his life. He is married with one daughter. Andrew is of of English, Swiss and Greek origins, including a great-great-grandfather who is acknowledged as the first Greek settler in Australia, arriving in Adelaide in 1840.Andrew Bartlett Speech. He was educated at the University of Queensland, where he graduated in arts and social work. Before entering politics, Bartlett was a social worker with the Department of Social Security, and worked with community radio station 4ZZZFM in roles including announcer and finance coordinator. A big modern music fan, he played in a number of local bands, as a drummer and keyboard player. On his personal blog, Bartlett has noted that he is a fan of both Joy Division and Nick Cave. Bartlett is active on animal rights issues and is a vegetarian.
In 1990, Bartlett joined the staff of then Australian Democrats Leader Cheryl Kernot. Three years later he joined the staff of Democrats Senator John Woodley as an adviser and researcher. He was the Democrats' Queensland Campaign Director for the 1993 and 1996 elections and Federal Campaign Director in 1998. Bartlett was appointed to the Senate in 1997 to fill the casual vacancy caused by the resignation of Kernot, and went on to win the seat at the 2001 Federal election.

Service in the Australian Senate


A consistent and vocal campaigner for refugees and asylum seekers, Bartlett is the only Australian parliamentarian to have visited every refugee detention centre in Australia, as well as those on Christmas Island and Nauru (detention centres off the Australian mainland, see Australia's Pacific Solution) where he went three times to meet with detainees.
Bartlett initiated the Senate Inquiry into Australia's refugee determination system which produced the "Sanctuary Under Review" report in 2000, and has participated in numerous other committee inquiries into immigration matters.
Bartlett has spoken many times on behalf of those living in poverty, as well as the physically and mentally disabled. He also takes a close interest in the environment and animal welfare. In 2003 he introduced a private member's bill to overhaul the animal welfare system in Australia. His petition to end the live sheep export trade has received well over 100,000 signatures.
Bartlett was a strong opponent of Australia's involvement in the 2003 invasion of Iraq. He introduced a private member's bill designed to ensure no Prime Minister of Australia could again send the country to war without the consent of both houses of parliament. When the bill was debated in the Senate, speakers from both major parties indicated their opposition to it, although there was no formal vote taken.
Bartlett has also campaigned strongly for gay rights. In 2004, he cried in the Senate chamber over a proposed law to define marriage as between a man and a woman, which he called an "absolute disgrace".[1]
Bartlett co-sponsored the Cluster Munitions (Prohibition) Bill 2006, which was introduced into the Senate on December 5, 2006. If enacted, it would prevent Australia from using, manufacturing or possessing cluster munitions.

Leader of the Australian Democrats


After the resignation of then party Senate leader Natasha Stott Despoja on 21 August, 2002, Bartlett was elected to the Democrats Party leadership in October, supplanting ''pro tem.'' incumbent Brian Greig.
To a degree, Bartlett stabilised the Democrats' troubled party room and spoke strongly against the Government's maltreatment of refugees and maladministration of the Department of Immigration. He also oversaw the Democrat senators' use of their potential balance of power role to influence increased funding for Medicare, protection of the welfare payments of sole parents, the unemployed and the disabled, and entitlement of some homosexual couples to superannuation entitlements equivalent to those enjoyed by heterosexual couples.
In December, 2003, Bartlett relinquished his AD Senate leadership after an incident involving Liberal Senator Jeannie Ferris when leaving the Senate chamber after a vote. Bartlett, who had been drinking at a Liberal Party function held just outside the chamber, was accused of stealing five bottles of wine from the function. Some time after Ferris had retrieved the wine, Bartlett approached Ferris, and was alleged to have gripped her arm and verbally abused her, both inside the chamber and along the way to an outside courtyard. Parliamentary video of part of the incident appeared to show that Bartlett was drunk in the chamber. Bartlett's subsequent formal apology was accompanied by a bottle of wine, which Ferris
described as "quite inappropriate ... as an apology for drunken behaviour involving abuse and a physical attack."[2]
Bartlett resumed the party's parliamentary leadership in January, 2004, giving an assurance that he would totally abstain from alcohol, which he appears to have maintained. However, the party's support levels remained at the same low level to which it had fallen at the time of Stott Despoja's resignation. He was unable to exercise a favourable influence in the 2004 election in which the Democrats were defending three Senate seats, and all three were lost--one going to the Greens and two to Liberals. The party polled its lowest vote since inception in 1977.

2004 Federal election to present


After the election, Bartlett declined to nominate for the leadership, allowing Lyn Allison to be elected unopposed, he himself being elected as deputy leader, also unopposed.
In 2004, Bartlett become the first Australian federal politician to operate his own blog. In 2006, he is still only one of just a handful (other known federal politicians who blog being Kate Lundy, Malcolm Turnbull and Steve Fielding). However, he has not been able to match the success of A.L.P. leader Kevin Rudd who has registered thousands of supporters on a MySpace site [1] .
Bartlett will face re-election at the 2007 election. Based on the recent electoral performance of the Australian Democrats, the ascendancy of the Queensland Greens [3] and the probable nomination of popular independent Pauline Hanson, Bartlett appears unlikely to retain his seat.
On July 8 2007, Bartlett launched his re-election campaign at the Gardens Theatre at the Queensland University of Technology's Garden Point campus in Brisbane City.[2] To an audience of about 200, he identified Pauline Hanson as his main threat and admitted the Democrats were "a shrinking force in Australian politics".[3]

References


1. Schubert, Misha: Democrat pleads for rethink on gay marriage ban, ''The Age'', 14 August 2004.
2. Nicholson, Brendan; Debelle, Penelope: Disgraced leader steps aside, ''The Age'', 7 December 2003.
3. At the 2004 Senate election, the Greens polled 7.67% overall as against the Democrats' 2.09%

External links



Senator Andrew Bartlett

Senator Andrew Bartlett - personal weblog

Hansard - Andrew Bartlett response to Marriage Act Amendment

★ "Mauled by a wild MP", 6 December 2003, Herald Sun (mirrored)

Andrew Bartlett interview - The new Senate, the Democrats and blogging, 9 August 2005, Vibewire.net

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