Gerard Henderson
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Gerard Henderson, Ph.D. is an Australian newspaper columnist for the Sydney Morning Herald. He is also Executive Director of the Sydney Institute, a privately funded current affairs forum and think-tank. His wife Anne Henderson is Deputy Director.
Dr. Henderson attended the Jesuit Xavier College in Melbourne. He studied Arts and Law at the University of Melbourne, prior to completing his Ph.D. He taught at Tasmania and La Trobe universities before working for four years on the staff of Kevin Newman in Malcolm Fraser’s Coalition government.
From 1980 to 1983 he was employed in the Commonwealth Department of Industrial Relations and was Chief-of-Staff to John Howard between 1984 and 1986 (during which time Howard was Deputy Leader, and later, Leader of the Liberal Party of Australia). Gerard Henderson was appointed by the Keating government to the board of the Australia Foundation for Culture and the Humanities and by the Howard government to the editorial board of the Documents on Australian Foreign Policy series.
As a commentator Henderson is considered to be sympathetic to the conservative side of politics on issues such as the federal government's WorkChoices legislation, "national security" and the Iraq War, while holding progressive political views on the Australian republic, asylum seekers and euthanasia. His columns have defended Howard government policy on Iraq and national security since 9/11 but have been critical of the Howard government on asylum seekers and multiculturalism.
Gerard Henderson is the author of Mr Santamaria and the Bishops (1982), Australian Answers (1990), Gerard Henderson Scribbles On (1993), Menzies' Child: The Liberal Party of Australia (1994, second edition 1998) and A Howard Government? Inside the Coalition (Harper Collins, 1995) - as well as numerous articles and essays. In August 1994 he profiled former Prime Minister Bob Hawke for the ABC TV Four Corners program.
[edit] Media appearances
Henderson regularly appears as a commentator on political TV programs such as Insiders (ABC) and Agenda (Sky News).