Jenny Macklin

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The Honourable
 Jenny Macklin 
BComm (Hons) (Melb), MP
Jenny Macklin

In office
3 December 2007 – Current
Constituency Jagajaga

Born 29 September 1953 (1953-09-29) (age 54)
Brisbane, Queensland, Australia
Political party Australian Labor Party
Residence Ivanhoe, Victoria
Website JennyMacklin.com

Jennifer Louise Macklin (born 29 December 1953), is an Australian politician. She is Minister for Families, Housing, Community Services and Indigenous Affairs in the Rudd Labor Government. She has been a member of the Australian House of Representatives since March 1996, representing the Division of Jagajaga, Victoria.

[edit] Biography

Born in Brisbane, Queensland, Macklin grew up in country Victoria. She spent time in Japan as a student before graduating from the University of Melbourne with an honours degree in economics. A Marxist in her youth, she is a member of the Socialist Left faction of the Labor Party.

Macklin was a researcher at the Australian National University in 1976-78, an economics research specialist with the Parliamentary Library in Canberra 1978-81, Research Coordinator at the Labour Resource Centre in Melbourne 1981-85, an adviser to the Victorian Minister for Health 1985-88, director of the federal government's National Health Strategy 1990-93 and director of the Australian Urban and Regional Development Review 1993-95.

On her election to Parliament, Macklin was immediately elected a member of the Opposition Shadow Cabinet, where she served in a number of roles, including Shadow Minister for Aged Care, Social Security and the Status of Women. After the 1998 election, Macklin became Shadow Minister for Health.

Jenny Macklin (left) at the apology for the stolen generations.
Jenny Macklin (left) at the apology for the stolen generations.

After the ALP's defeat at the 2001 election, Macklin was elected Deputy Leader to Simon Crean. She was the first woman to hold a leadership position in either Australian major party. She took on the position of Shadow Minister for Education. Following Crean's replacement as leader by Mark Latham in December 2003, and Latham's subsequent resignation in January 2005, Macklin retained her position. Remaining as deputy leader under Kim Beazley, Macklin became the first person to be deputy to three leaders of the ALP since Frank Forde.

On 1 December 2006, Macklin's position as deputy leader of the Australian Labor Party came under threat after Kim Beazley called for a spill of all the leadership positions in a bid to end growing speculation over the issue. Shadow Minister for Foreign Affairs and Trade, Kevin Rudd, and Shadow Minister for Health, Julia Gillard, announced their intentions to run against Beazley and Macklin as a team for the positions of leader and deputy leader respectively of the party. On the day of the ballot, Macklin effectively stepped down from the position, choosing not to contest the deputy leadership after Kevin Rudd was elected as the new party leader. Macklin was once again elected to the Shadow frontbench, and was appointed Shadow Minister for Families & Community Services and Shadow Minister for Indigenous Affairs and Reconciliation.

After Labor's landslide victory against the Liberal/National Coalition in the 2007 Australian Federal Election, Prime Minister-elect announced that Macklin would be Minister for Families, Housing, Community Services and Indigenous Affairs. In this position, she oversaw the formal apology to the Stolen Generations and is working to acheive the Rudd Labor Government's election promises to improve the living standards of indigenous Australians.

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Political offices
Preceded by
Mal Brough
Minister for Families, Community
Services and Indigenous Affairs

2007 – present
Incumbent
Parliament of Australia
Preceded by
Peter Staples
Member for Jagajaga
1996 – present
Incumbent
Party political offices
Preceded by
Simon Crean
Deputy Leader of the Australian Labor Party
2001 – 2006
Succeeded by
Julia Gillard
Languages