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Women in the Australian Senate

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

There have been 127women in theAustralian Senate since the establishment of theParliament of Australia. Women have had the right to stand forfederal parliament since 1902, and there were three female candidates for the Senate at the1903 federal election (Vida Goldstein,Nellie Martel, andMary Moore-Bentley). However, it was not untilDorothy Tangney's victory at the1943 federal election that a woman was elected. Since then, all states and territories have had multiple female senators – in chronological order:Western Australia (1943),Queensland (1947),Victoria (1950),South Australia (1955),Tasmania (1975), theAustralian Capital Territory (1975),New South Wales (1987), and theNorthern Territory (1998).

History

[edit]
Dame Dorothy Tangney, the first woman in the Australian Senate

The passage of theCommonwealth Franchise Act allowed women to both vote and stand for election to the Parliament of Australia.[1][2] Three women stood unsuccessfully as independents or as representatives of minor parties for election to the Senate for the 1903 election.Nellie Martel andMary Ann Moore-Bentley of New South Wales ran, each earning around 18,000 votes, with the leading man winning roughly 190,000 votes.[3]Vida Goldstein, from Victoria, ran and gained 51,497 votes, which was roughly half the votes the winning man gained.[3] She then ran unsuccessfully again in 1910 and 1917 after a short stint attempting to breakthrough into theHouse of Representatives.[3] In 1919, Mary McMahon of NSW ran unsuccessfully, and was not followed by another woman candidate until 1934 saw Lillie Beirne (NSW) and Joanna Helbach (QLD) run.[3] Following this,Jeanne Young of Western Australia ran in 1937 andAdela Walsh (NSW) andDorothy Tangney (WA) ran in 1940.[3] However, women were not successful in entering federal politics untilWorld War II. The major parties did not endorse any female candidates for the Senate before the War.

The first woman to be elected to the Senate wasLabor representativeDorothy Tangney in 1943; she represented Western Australia.[3] Following Tangney's entry into politics, the Senate has continuously had women members. However, despite the success, the number of women running continued to fluctuate drastically. Prior to 1981, the proportion of women running as candidates peaked at 20% in 1977 but had a low of only 1.3% in 1953.[4] Between the years 1943 and 1969, there were only five elections of women andEnid Lyons accounted for three of these in the House of Representatives.[5] Despite this, 41 women were elected into the Senate between 1943 and 1980.[4] The proportion of women in the Senate can be seen over a long time period to have drastically grown, with the 1948 Senate being composed of 5.6% women, 14.1% in 1980, 23.7% in 1990, 28.9% in 2002, and 53% in 2021.[6]

The second woman elected to the Senate,Annabelle Rankin, also achieved a number of firsts for women: she was the first femaleWhip, and she was the first woman with a federal portfolio when she became Minister for Housing in 1966. In 1975,Margaret Guilfoyle became the first female cabinet minister with a portfolio. In 1996Margaret Reid was the first woman elected as President of the Senate.[7]

Women in the Senate have made significant changes to Australian law which have benefited women. For example, a private member's bill written by SenatorSusan Ryan was crucial to the development of theSex Discrimination Act 1984, theAffirmative Action (Equal Employment Opportunity for Women) Act 1986, thePublic Service Reform Act 1984 and theEqual Employment Opportunity (Commonwealth Authorities) Act 1987.

With the appointment ofSarah Henderson to the Senate on 11 September 2019, the number of women in the chamber was equal to the number of men for the first time in history.[8] With the resignation ofRichard Di Natale and the appointment ofLidia Thorpe on 4 September 2020, the number of women (39) exceeded the number of men (37) for the first time.

List of women in the Australian Senate

[edit]

Names inbold type indicate Ministers and Parliamentary Secretaries.Names initalics indicate appointments made under section 15 of the Constitution, or through disqualification. Names marked with an asterisk (*) also served in theHouse of Representatives. Where no closing date is shown, the Senator's term of service is unexpired.

PortraitName
(lifespan)
StateTermHow endedParty
Term startTerm end
Sen. TangneyDorothy Tangney

(1907–1985)

Western AustraliaWA21 August 194330 June 1968DefeatedLabor
Sen. RankinAnnabelle Rankin

(1908–1986)

QueenslandQld1 July 194724 April 1971ResignedLiberal
Sen. RobertsonAgnes Robertson

(1882–1968)

Western AustraliaWA22 February 195030 June 1962RetiredLiberal
Independent
Country
Sen. WedgwoodIvy Wedgwood

(1896–1975)

Victoria (state)Vic22 February 195030 June 1971RetiredLiberal
Sen. ButtfieldNancy Buttfield

(1912–2005)

South AustraliaSA11 October 195530 June 1965DefeatedLiberal
1 July 196811 April 1974Retired
Sen. BreenMarie Breen

(1902–1993)

Victoria (state)Vic1 July 196230 June 1968RetiredLiberal
Sen. GuilfoyleMargaret Guilfoyle

(1926–2020)

Victoria (state)Vic1 July 19715 June 1987RetiredLiberal
Sen. ColemanRuth Coleman

(1931–2008)

Western AustraliaWA18 May 19745 June 1987RetiredLabor
Sen. MelzerJean Melzer

(1926–2013)

Victoria (state)Vic18 May 197430 June 1981DefeatedLabor
Sen. SullivanKathy Sullivan*

(born 1942)

QueenslandQld18 May 19745 November 1984ResignedLiberal
Sen. RyanSusan Ryan

(1942–2020)

Australian Capital TerritoryACT13 December 197529 January 1988ResignedLabor
Shirley Walters

(1925–2017)

TasmaniaTas13 December 197530 June 1993RetiredLiberal
Sen. HainesJanine Haines

(1945–2004)

South AustraliaSA14 December 197730 June 1978RetiredDemocrats
1 July 19811 March 1990Resigned
Jean Hearn

(1921–2017)

TasmaniaTas15 October 198030 June 1985RetiredLabor
Sen. Bjelke-PetersenFlorence Bjelke-Petersen

(1920–2017)

QueenslandQld12 March 198130 June 1993RetiredNational
Sen. ReidMargaret Reid

(born 1935)

Australian Capital TerritoryACT5 May 198114 February 2003ResignedLiberal
Patricia Giles

(1928–2017)

Western AustraliaWA1 July 198130 June 1993RetiredLabor
Sen. CrowleyRosemary Crowley

(born 1938)

South AustraliaSA5 March 198330 June 2002RetiredLabor
Margaret Reynolds

(born 1941)

QueenslandQld5 March 198330 June 1999RetiredLabor
Olive Zakharov

(1929–1995)

Victoria (state)Vic5 March 19836 March 1995DiedLabor
Sue Knowles

(born 1951)

Western AustraliaWA1 December 198430 June 2005RetiredLiberal
Sen. VanstoneAmanda Vanstone

(born 1952)

South AustraliaSA1 December 198426 April 2007ResignedLiberal
Sen. VallentineJo Vallentine

(born 1946)

Western AustraliaWA1 July 198531 January 1992ResignedNuclear Disarmament
Independent
Greens WA
Jocelyn Newman

(1937–2018)

TasmaniaTas13 March 19861 February 2002ResignedLiberal
Sen. PowellJanet Powell

(1942–2013)

Victoria (state)Vic26 August 198630 June 1993DefeatedDemocrats
Independent
Sue West

(born 1947)

New South WalesNSW11 February 19875 June 1987DefeatedLabor
1 July 199030 June 2002Retired
Sen. BishopBronwyn Bishop*

(born 1942)

New South WalesNSW11 July 198724 February 1994ResignedLiberal
Sen. JenkinsJean Jenkins

(born 1938)

Western AustraliaWA11 July 198730 June 1990DefeatedDemocrats
Sen. PattersonKay Patterson

(born 1944)

Victoria (state)Vic11 July 198730 June 2008RetiredLiberal
Irina Dunn

(born 1948)

New South WalesNSW21 July 198830 June 1990DefeatedNuclear Disarmament
Independent
Meg Lees

(born 1948)

South AustraliaSA4 April 199030 June 2005DefeatedDemocrats
Vicki Bourne

(born 1954)

New South WalesNSW1 July 199030 June 2002DefeatedDemocrats
Cheryl Kernot*

(born 1948)

QueenslandQld1 July 199015 October 1997ResignedDemocrats
Karin Sowada

(born 1961)

New South WalesNSW29 August 199130 June 1993DefeatedDemocrats
Sen. ChamaretteChristabel Chamarette

(born 1948)

Western AustraliaWA12 March 199230 June 1996DefeatedGreens WA
Sen. MargettsDee Margetts

(born 1955)

Western AustraliaWA1 July 199330 June 1999DefeatedGreens WA
Sen. TroethJudith Troeth

(born 1940)

Victoria (state)Vic1 July 199330 June 2011RetiredLiberal
Kay Denman

(born 1937)

TasmaniaTas24 August 199330 June 2005RetiredLabor
Belinda Neal*

(born 1963)

New South WalesNSW8 March 19943 September 1998ResignedLabor
Sen. CollinsJacinta Collins

(born 1962)

Victoria (state)Victoria3 May 199530 June 2005DefeatedLabor
8 May 200815 February 2019Resigned
Sen. DespojaNatasha Stott Despoja

(born 1969)

South AustraliaSA29 November 199530 June 2008RetiredDemocrats
Sen. LundyKate Lundy

(born 1967)

Australian Capital TerritoryACT2 March 199624 March 2015ResignedLabor
Sue Mackay

(born 1960)

TasmaniaTas8 March 199627 June 2005ResignedLabor
Sen. AllisonLyn Allison

(born 1946)

Victoria (state)Vic1 July 199630 June 2008DefeatedDemocrats
Sen. CoonanHelen Coonan

(born 1947)

New South WalesNSW1 July 199622 August 2011ResignedLiberal
Jeannie Ferris

(1941-2007)

South AustraliaSA1 July 19962 April 2007DiedLiberal
Brenda Gibbs

(born 1947)

QueenslandQld1 July 199630 June 2002DefeatedLabor
Sen. PayneMarise Payne

(born 1964)

New South WalesNSW9 April 199730 September 2023ResignedLiberal
Karen Synon

(born 1959)

Victoria (state)Vic13 May 199730 June 1999DefeatedLiberal
Sen. CrossinTrish Crossin

(born 1956)

Northern TerritoryNT16 June 19986 September 2013RetiredLabor
Jan McLucas

(born 1958)

QueenslandQld1 July 19999 May 2016RetiredLabor
Linda Kirk

(born 1967)

South AustraliaSA1 July 200230 June 2008RetiredLabor
Sen. MooreClaire Moore

(born 1956)

QueenslandQld1 July 200230 June 2019RetiredLabor
Sen. NettleKerry Nettle

(born 1973)

New South WalesNSW1 July 200230 June 2008DefeatedGreens
Ursula Stephens

(born 1954)

New South WalesNSW1 July 200230 June 2014DefeatedLabor
Ruth Webber

(born 1965)

Western AustraliaWA1 July 200230 June 2008DefeatedLabor
Sen. WongPenny Wong

(born 1968)

South AustraliaSA1 July 2002presentIncumbentLabor
Sen. Fierravanti-WellsConcetta Fierravanti-Wells

(born 1960)

New South WalesNSW5 May 200530 June 2022RetiredLiberal
Judith Adams

(1943-2012)

Western AustraliaWA1 July 200531 March 2012DiedLiberal
Annette Hurley

(born 1955)

South AustraliaSA1 July 200530 June 2011RetiredLabor
Sen. McEwenAnne McEwen

(born 1954)

South AustraliaSA1 July 20052 July 2016RetiredLabor
Sen. MilneChristine Milne

(born 1953)

TasmaniaTas1 July 200510 August 2015ResignedGreens
Sen. NashFiona Nash

(born 1965)

New South WalesNSW1 July 200527 October 2017election voidedNational
Helen Polley

(born 1957)

TasmaniaTas1 July 2005presentIncumbentLabor
Sen. SiewertRachel Siewert

(born 1961)

Western AustraliaWA1 July 20056 September 2021ResignedGreens
Dana Wortley

(born 1959)

South AustraliaSA1 July 200530 June 2011DefeatedLabor
Sen. BrownCarol Brown

(born 1965)

TasmaniaTas25 August 2005presentIncumbentLabor
Sue Boyce

(born 1951)

QueenslandQld19 April 200730 June 2014RetiredLiberal
Mary Jo Fisher

(born 1962)

South AustraliaSA6 June 200714 August 2012ResignedLiberal
Sen. BilykCatryna Bilyk

(born 1959)

TasmaniaTas1 July 2008presentIncumbentLabor
Sen. CashMichaelia Cash

(born 1970)

Western AustraliaWA1 July 2008presentIncumbentLiberal
Sen. Hanson-YoungSarah Hanson-Young

(born 1981)

South AustraliaSA1 July 2008presentIncumbentGreens
Helen Kroger

(born 1959)

Victoria (state)Vic1 July 200830 June 2014DefeatedLiberal
Sen. PrattLouise Pratt

(born 1972)

Western AustraliaWA1 July 200830 June 2014DefeatedLabor
2 July 2016presentIncumbent
Sen. McKenzieBridget McKenzie

(born 1969)

Victoria (state)Vic1 July 2011presentIncumbentNational
Sen. RhiannonLee Rhiannon

(born 1951)

New South WalesNSW1 July 201115 August 2018ResignedGreens
Sen. SinghLisa Singh

(born 1972)

TasmaniaTas1 July 201130 June 2019DefeatedLabor
Anne Urquhart

(born 1957)

TasmaniaTas1 July 201128 March 2025ResignedLabor
Sen. WatersLarissa Waters

(born 1977)

QueenslandQld1 July 201118 July 2017ResignedGreens
6 September 2018presentIncumbent
Sen. WrightPenny Wright

(born 1968)

South AustraliaSA1 July 20119 September 2015ResignedGreens
Lin Thorp

(born 1953)

TasmaniaTas20 June 201230 June 2014DefeatedLabor
Sen. RustonAnne Ruston

(born 1967)

South AustraliaSA5 September 2012presentIncumbentLiberal
Sen. LinesSue Lines

(born 1953)

Western AustraliaWA15 May 2013presentIncumbentLabor
Sen. PerisNova Peris

(born 1971)

Northern TerritoryNT7 September 20139 May 2016RetiredLabor
Sen. O'NeillDeborah O'Neill*

(born 1961)

New South WalesNSW13 November 2013presentIncumbentLabor
Sen. LambieJacqui Lambie

(born 1971)

TasmaniaTas.1 July 201414 November 2017ResignedPalmer United
Independent
Lambie Network
1 July 2019presentIncumbent
Sen. ReynoldsLinda Reynolds

(born 1965)

Western AustraliaWA1 July 2014presentIncumbentLiberal
Sen. RiceJanet Rice

(born 1960)

Victoria (state)Vic1 July 201419 April 2024ResignedGreens
Sen. GallagherKaty Gallagher

(born 1970)

Australian Capital TerritoryACT26 March 20159 May 2018ResignedLabor
18 May 2019presentincumbent
Sen. McAllisterJenny McAllister

(born 1973)

New South WalesNSW6 May 2015presentIncumbentLabor
Joanna Lindgren

(born 1969)

QueenslandQld21 May 20152 July 2016DefeatedLiberal
Sen. HansonPauline Hanson*

(born 1954)

QueenslandQld2 July 2016presentIncumbentOne Nation
Sen. HumeJane Hume

(born 1971)

Victoria (state)Vic2 July 2016presentIncumbentLiberal
Sen. Kakoschke-MooreSkye Kakoschke-Moore

(born 1985)

South AustraliaSA2 July 201622 November 2017ResignedXenophon Team
Sen. McCarthyMalarndirri McCarthy

(born 1970)

Northern TerritoryNT2 July 2016presentIncumbentLabor
Sen. KitchingKimberley Kitching

(1970–2022)

Victoria (state)Vic25 October 201610 March 2022DiedLabor
Sen. GichuhiLucy Gichuhi

(born 1962)

South AustraliaSA19 April 201730 June 2019DefeatedFamily First
Independent
Liberal
Sen. KeneallyKristina Keneally

(born 1968)

New South WalesNSW14 February 201813 April 2022ResignedLabor
Sen. StokerAmanda Stoker

(born 1980)

QueenslandQld21 March 201830 June 2022DefeatedLiberal
Sen. FaruqiMehreen Faruqi

(born 1963)

New South WalesNSW15 August 2018presentIncumbentGreens
Wendy Askew

(born 1963)

TasmaniaTas6 March 2019presentIncumbentLiberal
Sam McMahon

(born 1967)

Northern TerritoryNT18 May 201921 May 2022DefeatedCountry Liberal
Claire Chandler

(born 1990)

TasmaniaTas1 July 2019presentIncumbentLiberal
Perin Davey

(born 1972)

New South WalesNSW1 July 2019presentIncumbentNational
Nita Green

(born 1983)

QueenslandQld1 July 2019presentIncumbentLabor
Hollie Hughes

(born 1975)

New South WalesNSW1 July 2019presentIncumbentLiberal
Susan McDonald

(born 1970)

QueenslandQld1 July 2019presentIncumbentNational
Marielle Smith

(born 1986)

South AustraliaSA1 July 2019presentIncumbentLabor
Sen. WalshJess Walsh

(born 1971)

Victoria (state)Vic1 July 2019presentIncumbentLabor
Sen. HendersonSarah Henderson*

(born 1964)

Victoria (state)Vic11 September 2019presentIncumbentLiberal
Sen. ThorpeLidia Thorpe

(born 1973)

Victoria (state)Vic4 September 2020presentIncumbentGreens
Independent
Sen. CoxDorinda Cox

(born 1976)

Western AustraliaWA14 September 2021presentIncumbentGreens
Labor
Karen Grogan

(born ?)

South AustraliaSA21 September 2021presentIncumbentLabor
Sen. StewartJana Stewart

(born 1987)

Victoria (state)Vic6 April 2022presentIncumbentLabor
Sen. PriceJacinta Nampijinpa Price

(born 1980)

Northern TerritoryNT21 May 2022presentIncumbentCountry Liberal
Sen. Allman-PaynePenny Allman-Payne

(born 1970)

QueenslandQld1 July 2022presentIncumbentGreens
Sen. LiddleKerrynne Liddle

(born 1967)

South AustraliaSA1 July 2022presentIncumbentLiberal
Sen. PaymanFatima Payman

(born 1995)

Western AustraliaWA1 July 2022presentIncumbentLabor
Independent
Australia's Voice
Sen. PocockBarbara Pocock

(born 1955)

South AustraliaSA1 July 2022presentIncumbentGreens
Sen. TyrrellTammy Tyrrell

(born 1970)

TasmaniaTas1 July 2022presentIncumbentLambie Network
Independent
Sen. WhiteLinda White

(1959/1960–2024)

Victoria (state)Vic1 July 202229 February 2024DiedLabor
Sen. KovacicMaria Kovacic

(born 1970)

New South WalesNSW31 May 2023presentIncumbentLiberal
Sen. Hodgins-MaySteph Hodgins-May

(born 1985)

Victoria (state)Vic1 May 2024presentIncumbentGreens
Lisa Darmanin

(born ?)

Victoria (state)Vic29 May 2024presentIncumbentLabor
Leah Blyth

(born ?)

South AustraliaSA6 February 2025presentIncumbentLiberal
Michelle Ananda-Rajah

(born 1972)

Victoria (state)Vic1 July 2025presentIncumbentLabor
Jessica Collins

(born ?)

New South WalesNSW1 July 2025presentIncumbentLiberal
Corinne Mulholland

(born 1987)

QueenslandQld1 July 2025presentIncumbentLabor
Sen. WalkerCharlotte Walker

(born 2004)

South AustraliaSA1 July 2025presentIncumbentLabor
Sen. WhiteakerEllie Whiteaker

(born ?)

Western AustraliaWA1 July 2025presentIncumbentLabor

Timeline

[edit]

Proportion of women in the Senate

[edit]

Numbers and proportions are as they were directly after the beginning of Senate terms and do not take into account deaths, resignations, appointments, defections or other changes in membership. As senators typically serve six-year terms, in the absence of a double dissolution, the numbers of female senators overlap two "terms". State-based Coalition parties that caucus with one of the major parties (Liberal National Party,Country Liberal Party) have been included in the Liberals' or Nationals' totals.

TermLaborLiberalNationalDemocratsGreensOthersTotal
WomenTotal%WomenTotal%WomenTotal%WomenTotal%WomenTotal%WomenTotal%WomenTotal%
1944–19471224.5%0120.0%020.0%000.0%000.0%000.0%1362.8%
1947–19501333.0%1250.0%010.0%000.0%000.0%000.0%2365.6%
1950–19511342.9%32114.3%050.0%000.0%000.0%000.0%4606.7%
1951–19531283.6%32611.5%060.0%000.0%000.0%000.0%4606.7%
1953–19561293.4%32611.5%050.0%000.0%000.0%000.0%4606.7%
1956–19591283.6%32412.5%1616.7%000.0%000.0%020.0%5608.3%
1959–19621263.8%32512.0%1714.3%000.0%000.0%020.0%5608.3%
1962–19651283.6%42416.7%060.0%000.0%000.0%020.0%5608.3%
1965–19681273.7%32313.0%070.0%000.0%000.0%030.0%4606.7%
1968–19710270.0%32114.2%070.0%000.0%000.0%050.0%3605.0%
1971–19740260.0%2219.5%050.0%000.0%000.0%080.0%2603.3%
1974–19752296.9%2238.7%060.0%000.0%000.0%020.0%4606.7%
1975–197832711.1%32711.1%080.0%000.0%000.0%020.0%6649.4%
1978–198132711.1%32810.7%060.0%020.0%000.0%010.0%6649.4%
1981–198342714.8%42814.3%1333.3%1520.0%000.0%010.0%106415.6%
1983–198473023.3%42416.7%1425.0%1520.0%000.0%010.0%136420.3%
1984–198763417.6%52817.9%1520.0%1714.3%000.0%1250.0%147618.4%
1987–199053215.6%72429.2%1520.0%3742.9%000.0%1333.3%177622.4%
1990–199353215.6%72924.1%1520.0%4850.0%11100.0%010.0%187623.7%
1993–199643013.3%73023.3%060.0%3742.9%22100.0%010.0%167621.1%
1996–199992931.0%83225.0%050.0%5771.4%1250.0%010.0%237630.3%
1999–200292931.0%93228.1%030.0%4944.4%010.0%020.0%227628.9%
2002–2005102835.7%83125.8%040.0%4850.0%1250.0%030.0%237630.3%
2005–2008122842.9%83324.2%1616.7%2450.0%3475.0%010.0%267634.2%
2008–2011143243.8%93228.1%1520.0%000.0%3560.0%020.0%277635.5%
2011–2014143145.2%82828.6%2633.3%000.0%6966.7%020.0%307639.5%
2014–2016142556.0%52718.5%2633.3%000.0%71070.0%1812.5%297638.2%
2016–2019142653.8%62425.0%2633.3%000.0%5955.6%31127.3%307639.5%
2019–2022162661.5%103033.3%4580.0%000.0%5955.6%2633.3%377648.7%
2022–2025162661.5%102638.5%4666.7%000.0%81266.7%3650.0%417653.9%
2025192965.5%112347.8%2450.0%000.0%61060.0%51050.0%437656.6%

See also

[edit]

Notes

[edit]
  1. ^Women in South and Western Australia voted in the 1901 election.
  2. ^Indigenous Australian women did not achieve federal franchise in all jurisdictions until 1962, and were not required by law to enrol to vote until 1983.
  3. ^abcdefSherrard, Kathleen (1943)."The Political History of Women in Australia".The Australian Quarterly.15 (4):36–51.doi:10.2307/20631140.JSTOR 20631140.
  4. ^abvan Tassell, G. Lane (1981)."Recruitment of Women in Australian National Politics: A Research Note".The Australian Quarterly.53 (3):334–342.doi:10.2307/20635131.ISSN 0005-0091.JSTOR 20635131.
  5. ^Cass, Deborah; Rubenstein, Kim (2021), Rubenstein, Kim (ed.),"Representation/s of Women in the Australian Constitutional System",Traversing the Divide, Honouring Deborah Cass's Contributions to Public and International Law (1 ed.), ANU Press, pp. 179–226,doi:10.2307/j.ctv1j9mjhx.16,JSTOR j.ctv1j9mjhx.16,S2CID 241304498, retrieved18 December 2021
  6. ^Uhr, John (2002)."Explicating the Australian Senate".The Journal of Legislative Studies.8 (3):3–26.doi:10.1080/714003923.ISSN 1357-2334.S2CID 145705033.
  7. ^Macdonald, Emma (7 January 2001). "Rising Above the Genteel Rumble of the Pink Palace".Canberra Times. Canberra, Australian Capital Territory. p. 18.ProQuest 1016152950.
  8. ^Macmillan, Jade (10 September 2019)."Gender equality set to be achieved in the Senate for the first time". Australia: ABC News. Retrieved14 September 2019.

References

[edit]
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