Connie Bonaros | |
|---|---|
| Member of theSouth Australian Legislative Council | |
| Assumed office 17 March 2018 (2018-03-17) | |
| Personal details | |
| Born | Constadina Bonaros |
| Party | SA-Best |
| Children | 1 |
| Alma mater | University of Adelaide |
| Website | conniebonaros |
Constadina Bonaros is an Australian politician. A former advisor toNick Xenophon, she was elected as anSA-Best member of theSouth Australian Legislative Council at the2018 state election.[1] Bonaros is the sole remaining parliamentary representative for SA-Best.
Bonaros has undergraduate degrees in Laws and Arts (Modern Greek and Social Politics) from theUniversity of Adelaide.[2] She had worked as a lawyer from 2003 until 2006. From 2005 onwards, Bonaros worked as an advisor toNick Xenophon andJohn Darley.[3] Bonaros stood at the2014 state election as the second candidate on the Independent Nick Xenophon Team ticket in theLegislative Council.[3][4] At the time Bonaros was a staffer to Darley, who led the ticket.[5] Although the Independent Nick Xenophon Team ticket polled 12.9% of the statewide vote, enough to elect Darley, Bonaros' bid for election was unsuccessful.[6] She joined SenatorStirling Griff's office as his chief of staff when he was elected at the 2016 federal election.[7]
Connie Bonaros wasSA-Best's lead candidate for the Legislative Council at the2018 South Australian state election.[8] She was successfully elected at the 2018 state election, becoming one of SA-Best's two parliamentarians, alongsideFrank Pangallo.[9][10]
Bonaros introduced a bill for a ban on child-likesex dolls in August 2019.[11] The bill received the support of both the opposition Labor and governingLiberal parties, was givenroyal assent in October 2019, and came into effect in January 2020.[12][13]
Bonaros has campaigned for tighter regulation ofanime andmanga, due to concerns over depiction of child exploitation material. In February 2020, she called for an urgent review of Australian classification laws, highlightingEromanga Sensei andNo Game No Life as series that involve children and themes of incest, rape and sexual abuse.[14] In July 2020,Books Kinokuniya removed those two series from theirSydney store, as well as five others, includingSword Art Online andGoblin Slayer.[15][16] Bonaros' advocacy also led to volumes ofNo Game No Life being refused classification by theAustralian Classification Board.[17]
In January 2020, Connie Bonaros made a complaint of inappropriate sexual harassment against another member of Parliament, with the incident involving a slap and having occurred at aChristmas party atParliament House.[18] It soon emerged the complaint was againstSam Duluk, Liberal MP forWaite, who apologised and resigned from a parliamentary committee chair position.[19] Following Bonaros' allegations and a report being made to the police, a statement was issued in April of 2020 bySouth Australia Police confirming that Duluk was facing one count of basicassault and would appear in court at a later date.[20] Duluk was ultimately acquitted in August 2021 due to the conflicting testimony of Bonaros and a Greens staffer, the latter of whom had suggested a different and irreconcilable version of events, per magistrate John Wells. However, Wells labeled Duluk's behaviour towards Bonaros as "rude, unpleasant, insensitive and disrespectful".[21] The following month,Tammy Franks used parliamentary privilege to levy additional allegations of sexual harassment and harassing remarks against Duluk.[22]
Bonaros supported a measure by theMalinauskas Labor government to merge theUniversity of South Australia and theUniversity of Adelaide, creatingAdelaide University. An October 2023 deal struck with Bonaros, as well as then-One Nation MLCSarah Game, saw student support funds for the proposed new university increased byA$20 million to a total of A$120 million in order to allow for greater allocation ofscholarships, as well as a A$40 million student support fund established forFlinders University.[23]
Bonaros' colleague in SA-Best, Frank Pangallo, had not yet decided to support the bill at the time of Bonaros' support for it. This difference in opinion was reported byThe Advertiser as a factor in Pangallo's December 2023 decision to leave SA-Best. Pangallo said at the time that his decision was motivated by ideological differences between him and Bonaros, while Bonaros stated that her values and that of SA-Best remained the same as those when she was elected.[24]
In May of 2024, Connie Bonaros, Tammy Franks, andMira El Dannawi all worePalestinian keffiyeh in the Legislative Council, which symbolise support forPalestine. LiberalNicola Centofanti criticised their decision as inappropriate and offensive, in response Bonaros cited thekilling of children in Gaza following theOctober 7 attacks as a far greater offense.[25]
Connie [...] has worked with Nick and the team for over 12 years [...] graduated from the University of Adelaide in Law with Honours [...] admitted to legal practice in 2003 [...] also holds a Bachelor of Arts majoring in Modern Greek and Social Politics [...] has been married to John for over 10 years. They have one cherished little son [...][self-published source]
Connie has worked with Nick Xenophon and John Darley MLC as their key adviser for the past nine years.
The exquisite irony is that his staffer, Connie Bonaros, was the one likely to have been elected.
A long-time Xenophon staffer Connie Bonaros is also on the ticket, in the number one position, followed by Mr Pangallo then Mr Johnson.