Roslyn Dundas
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Roslyn Dundas (born July 28, 1978) is an Australian politician. She was an Australian Democrats member of the Australian Capital Territory Legislative Assembly from 2001 to 2004, when she was defeated in a bid for re-election. Dundas was the youngest woman ever elected to an Australian parliament.
Dundas was born and raised in Canberra, and studied at Australian National University. While there, she became heavily involved in both student politics and community organisations, becoming the ACT Co-ordinator of the Young Women's Electoral Lobby in 1998. She served on the Management Committee of the Women's Centre for Health Matters, and on the General Committee of the ACT Council of Social Service.
In 2000, Dundas became the National Secretary of the Young Australian Democrats movement, and National Convenor of the Democrat Students. In the same year, she was also secretary of the university student body, a member of the party executive in the ACT, and the founding co-convenor of the Vida Women's Network - an attempt to form a Democrat version of Emily's List Australia. During the year, she also served on the Women's Committee of the National Union of Students. In September 2000 she unsuccessfully ran for President of the Australian National University Students' Association, as the leader of a combined Democrat/Liberal election ticket.
Dundas worked as an organiser for the Community and Public Sector Union for several months in 2001, before gaining the top position on the Democrat ticket for the seat of Ginninderra in the ACT Legislative Assembly. She was subsequently elected, defeating conservative independent Dave Rugendyke. This made her the youngest woman elected to an Australian parliament, as well as the first Democrat to be elected in the ACT.
Once elected to the Assembly, Dundas actively campaigned for increased government accountability, the environment, and lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender rights. She supported a bill which liberalised the ACT's laws relating to abortion, and introduced a Private Member's Bill supporting the use of open source software. These stances placed her in the left wing of the party, along with the likes of Senators Natasha Stott Despoja and Brian Greig. Over the next three years, she developed a significant public profile. She also preserved Jon Stanhope's Australian Labor Party government by downgrading a no-confidence motion to a censure motion.
However, by 2004, the Australian Democrats were in serious trouble nationally. Stott Despoja had been toppled as leader, and the party had been embroiled in serious infighting between the left and right wings for two years. In the federal election, held the week before the territory election, all three Democrat Senators up for re-election were easily defeated.
Though some thought she would be able to survive, the state of the party at the federal level meant she faced a strong challenge. On election day, the Democrat vote collapsed, and Dundas lost the seat to the Australian Labor Party's Mary Porter.