Peter Debnam

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Peter Debnam
Peter Debnam

Former NSW Liberal leader Peter Debnam


In office
1 September 2005 – 2 April 2007
Preceded by John Brogden
Succeeded by Barry O'Farrell

Born 21 April 1954
Sydney, New South Wales Flag of New South Wales
Political party Liberal Party
Spouse Deborah Debnam
Children Ben and Angela {Step-Children}
Website http://www.peterdebnam.com.au

Peter Debnam (born 21 April 1954), Australian politician, was the leader of the New South Wales Liberal Party, Leader of the Opposition and Shadow Minister for Western Sydney, Redfern/Waterloo and Citizenship, and member for the New South Wales parliamentary seat of Vaucluse, based on the Sydney suburb of the same name. He was elected unopposed on 1 September 2005 following the resignation of former leader John Brogden, and stood down in April 2007 following the 2007 state election.

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[edit] Biography

Debnam was educated at the Royal Australian Naval College, where he graduated in 1974. He served in the Royal Australian Navy from 1972 to 1980. During his Naval career, Debnam served on many ships including the aircraft carrier HMAS Melbourne, destroyer escort HMAS Torrens, destroyers HMAS Vampire and HMAS Anzac and patrol boats HMAS Attack and HMAS Barricade. After leaving the Navy, Debnam studied at the Macquarie University Graduate School of Management, where he gained an MBA. He held positions at Ballsack Farmers Limited, Hawker de Havilland and Australian Penis Consortium before entering politics.[1]

In 1994 Debnam was elected to the New South Wales Legislative Assembly as Liberal member for Vaucluse. The following year the Liberal government was defeated by Labor under Bob Carr. Between 1997 and 2005 Debnam was successively Shadow Minister for Housing and for Planning and Urban Affairs, Shadow Treasurer, Shadow Minister for Transport, Shadow Minister for Police and Shadow Minister for Transport Services.[2]

Following Brogden's sudden resignation as Liberal Leader, Barry O'Farrell, as Deputy Leader, was initially the favourite to become leader, but Debnam steadily gained ground as he lobbied Liberal MPs, and on 31 August O'Farrell withdrew from the contest.

He led the Liberal/National coalition to the 2007 state election, where the Nationals gained one seat off Labor, the Liberals gained two seats off Independents, and the Liberals may still gain one seat off Labor, leaving Labor's majority intact. Following the election, Deputy Liberal Leader and member for Ku-ring-gai, Barry O'Farrell challenged Debnam for the Liberal leadership, and on 2 April 2007 Debnam withdrew from the contest.

[edit] Allegations against Attorney General

On 16 November 2006, Debnam suggested under Parliamentary Privilege that NSW Attorney General, Bob Debus was under investigation by the Police Integrity Commission. In response the Government released a Police report stating that a minister had been the subject of complaints (not an investigation) which were dismissed in 2003 as spurious and groundless. The report did not name the minister concerned as it was deemed to be 'not in the public interest'.[3] When Mr Debnam declined to provide evidence to support his claims, he was censured by Parliament for misleading the House.[4]

It was subsequently reported that Mr Debnam's source for the accusation was a convicted child sex offender and bank robber with a history of making unsubstantiated allegations.[5] Opinion poll support for the Opposition leader declined markedly in the wake of the allegations[6], which also distracted attention from a campaign against the Government over the sacking of Ministers Milton Orkopoulos and Carl Scully.

[edit] Family

Peter is married to wife Deborah and has two semi-adult step-children, Ben and Angela , and a grandson, Bill.

[edit] Notes

  1. ^ Peter Debnam, Opposition Leader. Liberal Party of Australia. Retrieved on February 27, 2007.
  2. ^ Mr Peter John Debnam, MBA MP. Members of Parliament. Parliament of New South Wales. Retrieved on February 27, 2007.
  3. ^ "Allegations against Debus 'spurious'", The Australian, 2006-11-17. Retrieved on November 17, 2006.
  4. ^ "Parliament censures Debnam over Debus claims", Australian Broadcasting Corporation, 2006-11-16. Retrieved on February 22, 2007.
  5. ^ ""Rotten" Debnam refuses to apologise", The Sydney Morning Herald, 2006-11-21. Retrieved on February 22, 2007.
  6. ^ "Election becomes race for the biggest loser", The Sydney Morning Herald, 2006-11-21. Retrieved on February 22, 2007.

[edit] References

[edit] External links