CHERYL KERNOT

'Cheryl Kernot' (Pronounced Ker-no) (born 5 December 1948) is a former Australian politician. She was the fifth leader of the Australian Democrats (23 April 1993 to 15 October 1997).

Contents
Political career
Life after politics
Reference
External links

Political career


Kernot spent twelve years as a political activist while working as a school teacher in New South Wales and Queensland[1]. She was first elected as a Senator for Queensland at the 1990 election, taking over from the retiring Senator Michael Macklin, who had held the seat for the Australian Democrats following the 1980 election. Kernot was elected as leader of the Democrats after the 1993 election, with Meg Lees as her deputy. Inside the party, she spearheaded a drive for central control of the state-based organisations, which resulted in protest resignations of members and the closure of the West Australian Division. Externally, however, she became a popular media spokesperson, leading the party to one of its best-ever results in the 1996 election and obtaining a primary vote of over 13% for herself.
In October 1997, Kernot controversially defected to the Australian Labor Party, resigning her Senate seat and leaving the leadership of the Democrats to her deputy, Lees. In her speech resigning from the Democrats, Kernot did not criticise the Democrats, saying her motivation was due to a "growing sense of outrage at the damage being done to Australia by the Howard Government" and that her position leading a minor party in the Senate meant she "had a limited capacity to help minimise that damage."[2] She also stated that she was "well aware of the political risks in this course of action".
Kernot narrowly won the division of Dickson for Labor at the 1998 election, before losing it at the 2001 election to the Liberal Party candidate Peter Dutton. Her period as a member of the Labor Party was marked by her position as Shadow Minister of Education, and a series of badly judged media appearances including an infamous photo of her wearing a red dress with a red feather boa.(Australian women's magazine pic)

Life after politics


After retiring from politics she wrote a "full and frank" book about her experiences, which was criticised by political journalist Laurie Oakes for failing to discuss her extramarital affair whilst leader of the Democrats with Labor front bencher and former Foreign Minister, Gareth Evans.[3]
Kernot now lives in London, and has recently been the director of learning at the London School for Social Entrepreneurs. She has since become a Programme Director in the Nurse/AHP's Developmental Programme in Social Entrepreneurship at the Saïd Business School of the University of Oxford.

Reference


1. McGeough, Paul. "The other side of Saint Cheryl", ''Sydney Morning Herald'', (14 December 1997).
2. Kernot, Cheryl. "Resignation Speech", Canberra (15 October 1997). Retrieved on 2007-04-01.
3. "Laurie Oakes, Cheryl Kernot And The Unreported Story" (3 July 2002). Retrieved on 2007-04-01.


Cheryl Kernot, Senate Biography

External links



An article by her on Lynton Crosby in ''The Guardian''

A look at Laurie Oakes's "outing" of Kernot's affair.

Article: ''Sexism and the Cartoonist's Licence''

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