Meet Australia’s Out Gay Members Of Parliament
Australia has elected one of its most diverse Parliaments, as the country voted against attempts by former Prime Minister Scott Morrison to push wedge politics to the national stage for electoral gains.听
While the media attention was focussed on the ‘teal wave’, this election showed that the ‘pink wave’ was here to stay. There are eight out gay, lesbian and bisexual members of parliament, with emerging as one of the most powerful LGBTQI political leaders in Australia.听
, but in good news a more progressive Parliament was voted in. The eight out members in the House of Representatives and the Senate include, Senator Wong, Senator Loiuse Pratt, Senator Dean Smith, Senator Janet Rice, Senator Nita Green, MP Julian Hill, MP Angie Bell and MP Stephen Bates.听
“Many of us are relieved by the election results. Reprieved that voters rejected toxic transphobia, hatred, and exclusion and instead cast their ballot favour of equality,” Nevena Spirovska, Victorian Pride Lobby Co-Convenor, told the Star Observer.听
“We are especially thankful to all the advocates and organisations who worked to defeat the Religious Discrimination Bill and look forward to working with all parties to ensure LGBTIQ+ students and teachers are properly protected from discrimination,” said Spirovska.听
Star Observer 迟补办别蝉听a look at the Gay and Lesbian members of Australia’s Parliament.
Stephen Bates
Twenty-nine-year-old 聽Stephene Bates is the newest out gay MP to be elected to the Parliament at the 2022 federal elections from the seat of Brisbane.听
The incoming Greens MP, a retail worker scored a major upset when he defected out gay Liberal MP and former head of the National Retail Association, Trevor Evans. Bates had already won the gay vote, when his election ads on gay dating app Grindr featured such gems like聽 “The best parliaments are hung”, “Put Stephen Bates on top this election” and “Spice up Canberra with a third”.听
After his win, Bates thanked everyone who contributed to his win. “Hundreds of volunteers donated thousands of hours of their lives in hope of a better future. It takes a village to win an election and I am honoured and humbled to have been elected as the next Member for Brisbane,” Bates posted on Twitter.听
Angie Bell
Member for Moncreiff Angie Bell was the only out gay Liberal MP to be returned to the new Parliament.听
Bell was the first out gay woman to represent a major party in the House of Representatives when she was elected to the Parliament for the first time in 2019 (the first out gay woman to be elected to the Australian Parliament was independent Kerryn Phelps).听
Bell聽 is in a long term relationship with her partner Ros and the couple have four children.听
Julian Hill
Julian Hill, out gay member for Bruce, first entered Parliament in 2016. “As a Rainbow Labor member my election is a very small step to adding to the diversity of this parliament, and I am proud to see more LGBTI Australians in this parliament than the last,” Hill had said in his first speech in Parliament.
During the vote on Morrison government’s anti-LGBTQI Religious Discrimination Bill, Hill had said that “a Labor Government would introduce genuine protection from religious discrimination, without removing existing rights. And protect ALL kids from discrimination & bullying.”
, Hill acknowledged his two long-time partners Lorien and David.听
Dean Smith聽
Liberal Senator Dean Smith entered the senate in 2012 聽and was the first out gay federal parliamentarian in the Liberal party’s history.听
Smith had opposed same-sex marriages, but his views changed after the 2014 Sydney Lindt cafe siege. The death of cafe manager Tori Johnson, who was gay and had left behind his partner, changed the Senator’s views on gay marriages, Smith said.听
In 2017, Smith introduced the Marriage Amendment (Definition and Religious Freedoms) Bill 2017 in the Senate.听
Louise Pratt
Labor Senator Louise Pratt entered the Parliament for the first time in 2008. She was the second out lesbian in Parliament and the first to have a trans partner, Aram Hosie, transgender man and activist.听
Pratt, along with three of her Senate colleagues introduced the Marriage Amendment Bill 2012 in the Senate. The legislation failed to pass. “We exist. We already exist… all we ask is that you stop pretending that we don’t,” Pratt had said in her speech in the Parliament while introducing the bill.听
Pratt was the first out gay Parliamentarian to give birth to a baby while in office.
Nita Green聽
Senator Nita Green was elected to the senate for the first time at the 2019 federal elections.听
Green and her wife Lacey had a baby girl earlier this year and Green became Queensland’s first gay parliamentarian to have a baby while in office.听
“My wife Lacey and I are very pleased to announce the birth of baby Stevie. Bub is doing well and we are absolutely smitten,” Senator Green posted on social media.听
Senator Janet Rice
Greens Senator Janet Rice was first elected to the senate in 2014. Rice, came out as bisexual after her wife late Penny Whetton’s gender transition.听
Rice has spoken out against Scott Morrison’s Religious Discrimination bill, so-called conversion therapy, supported same-sex marriages and ending discrimination against gay and trans students and teachers.听
called on “all Australians, especially cisgender, heterosexual Australians, to stand with and support your LGBTIQ+ family, friends and communities to make sure governments continue to remove discrimination from our laws and from our society.”
Senator Penny Wong
was voted as Australia’s most trusted politician today. Senator Wong who first entered the Senate in 2002, was last month appointed Australia’s foreign minister by the country’s new Prime Minister Anthony Albanese.听
鈥淚鈥檝e never sought to be a role model but I have come to understand that you can鈥檛 be what you can鈥檛 see,鈥 said Wong, who is the of of the most high profile LGBTQI political leaders in the country today.
If there is one thing we can be sure of it is that Failed PM, Scott Morrison’s religious Discrimination Bill – a vile piece of Legislation which, if it had been passed, would have allowed Catholics, Anglicans, Uniting, Lutheran, Baptist and Pentecostals, Jews, Muslims, Hindus et al. to discriminate not just against Our GLBTIQ+ Community ( surprisingly there still those amongst us who believe in that old, White, fart up in the clouds, the blatant Misogyny of all Religions) but against members of their own Business organisations – let’s face that is all they are now & why do you think they are all so involved in that greatest scam of all “Aged Care”. They would have been able to discriminate against anyone who did not agree with their views – views, particularly within the Baptists & Pentecostals, which were all created by Men in order to control everyone else.
The ALP, Greens et al. tell us that Women should make up 50% of all MPs, Senators etc. – it is a fantastic Aspiration – unfortunately the ALP has mead it mandatory and to get those numbers it Guarantees it’s Female Candidates two very important things: A Safe Seat & a Fast-Track into a Ministry – The people of SA saw what a disaster that was during the 16 years of ALP Government in that State.
Maybe now we should aim to have, to start with, our Parliaments with 50% Heterosexuals & 50% Homosexuals – broadening that to encompass other members of the GLBTIQ+ Community.
I just hope in 2025 at the next federal election, Australia gets 3 times more LGBT representation, women and First Nations individuals! #LongOverdue
The loss of Zimmerman and Wilson from Parliament shouldn鈥檛 be mourned by the Queer Community. I cannot remember either of them speaking out in defence of our community if only rarely. Zimmerman maybe but certainly not Wilson
I can鈥檛 understand any queer people supporting Tory politics in this country when it is so obvious that all the Tories aspire to is complete denial and repression of our community.
Thank fuck they鈥檙e gone…
I’m as straight as they come, and am glad to see all of these people in parliament – as I think most right-minded people will be. What people do is important. Their gender orientation is of no relevance to how well they represent their constituants. However, for the benefit of others in this community, I hope their increased presence in parliament shows that a majority of this country does not care for the politics of division that the previous government seemed to have at its heart.
I am so proud of our government right now.