Victor Perton

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Victor Perton (born December 2, 1958) is a former Australian parliamentarian. He was a member of the Victorian Legislative Assembly from 1988 to November 2006, representing the electorate of Doncaster for the Liberal Party of Australia. He was Shadow Minister for Education, and one of the most visible members of the state opposition. He is now a regulatory affairs practitioner and Barrister. He is a Director of the Transport Accident Commission and on the Steering Committee on Education and Training in Philanthropy at the Asia-Pacific Centre for Philanthropy and Social Investment.

Perton was raised in Melbourne and is the son of refugees from Latvia and Lithuania, part of the large Baltic migration to Australia from refugee camps in western Europe after the Second World War. Perton attended Catholic schools later studying studied economics and law at Monash University, Melbourne University and Peking University.

He joined the Liberal Party in 1976 and served on the State Executive as State President of the Young Liberal Movement and in various state and local constituency offices over the next decade. He graduated from university in 1982, and began practicing as a solicitor, as well as being a part-owner of a retail business. In 1984 Perton was called to the Bar and became a barrister at the Victorian Bar. Perton subsequently gained admission to practice law in five states and in 1987, gained a Diploma of Chinese Law in 1987 from Peking University in the People's Republic of China.

He remained active within the Liberal Party after graduating, serving on its state council and state policy assembly, and in 1988, stood as the Liberal candidate in the safe Liberal seat of Doncaster. He was easily elected. In Opposition, he became well-known for his use of Freedom of Information Legislation and Government Scrutiny.[1][2] He was a member of the Liberal Party Investigatory Committee on Casino Policy in 1990 and became a critic of the introduction of gaming machines and casinos into Victoria. He was a Member of the Coalition Tricontinental[3] Taskforce and served as Parliamentary Secretary to the Shadow Treasurer with special responsibility for manufacturing industry and economic development.[4]

During the Kennett Government, Perton was active in regulatory scrutiny, regulatory reform[[5], technology policy and e-democracy[6][7]. [8]

Perton was the first Australian Parliamentarian with a web-site and later the first to use an electronic town hall.[9]

Perton served as the first Chairman of the Scrutiny of Acts and Regulations Committee. His wide interpretation of the "rights" to be protected was criticised by some within the government including Committee member and rising backbencher Louise Asher who produced a dissenting report. Then Foreign Minister, Gareth Evans, appointed Perton as an an Australian delegate to the Second UN Conference on Human Rights.

From 1996 he served as Chairman of the Law Reform Committee, the Multimedia Committee, the Data Protection Advisory Committee and the Electronic Business Framework Group.

During the Kennett Government, there was media criticism that the Government was reversing some of the transparency provisions introduced over the previous decades including the Freedom of Information and the Audit Act. Within the Government, young MPs like Steve Elder, Robert Doyle and Perton were seen as "small-l liberal" voices against controversial changes to the Auditor General's Act and the Freedom of Information Act.

In 1999, Perton became Shadow Minister for Conservation and Environment and Shadow Minister for Multimedia (later retitiled 'Shadow Minister for Technology & Innovation." Perton performed well in these positions, and in August 2002, when Robert Doyle (Napthine's successor as leader) embarked on a major reshuffle in a last-ditch bid to boost the party's flagging fortunes before the state election due late that year, he was promoted to Shadow Attorney-General while also holding the positions of Shadow Minister for Consumer Affairs, Shadow Minister for Aboriginal Affairs and Shadow Minister for Technology and Innovation.

Doyle's attempt to prevent a landslide defeat failed, and the party suffered the worst loss in its history, with several Shadow Ministers losing their seats, and Perton coming very close to losing his own. In the aftermath of the defeat, Perton was promoted to Shadow Minister of Education. He regularly appeared in the media with vocal criticism of the government, and remained amongst the opposition's most high-profile members.

Within the spectrum of Liberal Party thought, Perton is regarded as a "small-l liberal" [1][2], a position more common in the Victorian Liberal Party than the more aggressively right-wing New South Wales branch.

In February 2006, Perton announced that he would not contest the next election and relinquished his shadow ministry[10]. Mary Wooldridge was elected as the Liberal Member for Doncaster at the 2006 State Election.

Perton has remained active in supporting democracy movements in Asia.[11] He is Co-Chair of the Forum for a Democratic China.

Perton's wife Jane is a businesswoman. They have a son, Ted, born in 2005[3].

[edit] References

  1. ^ Liberals' Top Brass Brace For Party Purge, Ewin Hannan And Gabrielle Costa, The Age, 21 October 1999
  2. ^ "Libs to cross floor in (Religious Vilification) vote", Mathew Murphy, The Age, 4 May 2006
  3. ^ Perton quits, leaving Doyle in big pre-poll pickle, Paul Austin and Farrah Tomazin, The Age, 22 February 2006

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