Minister for Women Kelly O’Dwyer quitting federal politics

Updated

January 19, 2019 14:52:58

Federal Minister for Women Kelly O’Dwyer has announced she is quitting politics at the next election.

Key points:

  • Ms O’Dwyer said she was quitting for “very personal” reasons
  • She said she was confident her seat would be represented “incredibly well” by a woman
  • She joins a string of Liberal women who are departing at this year’s election

Ms O’Dwyer has represented the inner-Melbourne electorate of Higgins since 2009, has been a member of Cabinet since 2015, and is also the Minister for Jobs and Industrial Relations.

She will remain a minister until the next election, and holds the seat on a margin of about 8 per cent, fending off a challenge from the Greens at the last election.

“The decisive reasons are very personal,” Ms O’Dwyer said at a press conference with Prime Minister Scott Morrison today.

“My two smart and loving children, Olivia and Edward … will reach primary school age during the next parliament.

“In compiling photo books and in looking at all those special moments over the Christmas period I have seen how many of them I have missed.

“If my husband and I want to give ourselves the opportunity, the best opportunity to have a third child, we need to be very realistic.”

Ms O’Dwyer said she was “incredibly confident” her seat would be represented well by a woman who would come forward.

She said making changes to superannuation, legislating domestic violence leave and establishing the Australian Financial Complaints Authority were among her key achievements.

Ms O’Dwyer joins a string of Liberal women who are departing at this year’s election.

Queensland MP Jane Prentice was dumped by preselectors, South Australian Lucy Gichuhi was relegated to an unwinnable spot on the party’s Senate ticket, and Ann Sudmalis blamed “branch-stacking, undermining and leaks” for her decision not to recontest the New South Wales seat of Gilmore.

Julia Banks also abandoned the Liberal Party late last year and moved to the crossbench, describing the treatment of women in Parliament as “years behind” the business world.

Less than one quarter of Government MPs are women, while nearly half of all federal ALP MPs are women.

The Liberal Party has a goal for women to make up half of its party room by 2025.

Topics:

government-and-politics,

australia

First posted

January 19, 2019 13:41:32

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