Mal Colston

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Dr Malcolm Arthur Colston (5 April 193823 August 2003), Australian politician, was a Senator in the Parliament of Australia representing the state of Queensland between 13 December 1975 and 30 June 1999. He was a member of the Australian Labor Party (ALP) until 20 August 1996, but then resigned from the party and sat as an independent until his retirement from the Senate.

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[edit] Early life

Colston was born in Brisbane and became a teacher. He joined the Labor Party at the age of 20 while completing a doctorate in educational psychology.

[edit] Role in 1975 Constitutional Crisis

Colston indirectly played a role in the Australian constitutional crisis of 1975.

On 30 June 1975, Queensland ALP Senator Bert Milliner died suddenly. The Labor Party nominated Colston to fill the casual vacancy in the Senate. The Constitution provides that a Senate casual vacancy is filled by a person appointed by the relevant state parliament. Although it did not become a constitutional requirement until 1977, it had been longstanding convention that the state parliament appoints a person nominated by the departing Senator's party. However, the Premier of Queensland, Joh Bjelke-Petersen, claimed that Colston was a "dangerous socialist" and refused to appoint him. Officially though, Bjelke-Petersen expressed doubts over Colston's integrity and instead appointed Albert Field, who was a member of the Labor Party but was staunchly opposed the policies of the Gough Whitlam Labor government.[1]

The appointment of Field (rather than Colston) gave the Coalition the numbers to block supply, and it was therefore a crucial event in the Australian constitutional crisis of 1975.

[edit] Labor Senator

At the ensuing 1975 election, Colston was elected as a Labor senator. He continued to serve as a Labor senator until 1996.

[edit] After Labor

After the 1996 election, the Labor Party refused to nominate him to become Deputy President of the Senate. In a bid to win him over, the Howard Coalition government offered to support him. He resigned from the Labor Party by fax message at 11:30 am on 20 August, and he took his seat in the Senate as an independent that afternoon. In the evening he was elected Deputy President, on the nomination of the Coalition. While he opposed the Coalition's industrial relations package, he voted for the sale of a third of Telstra and some other government initiatives. His Senate term expired on 30 June 1999.

[edit] Travel allowances scandal

In 1997, Colston was charged by the Commonwealth Director of Public Prosecutions with 28 charges of defrauding the Commonwealth by allegedly misusing his parliamentary travel allowance. He then revealed that he was suffering from cancer. Prosecution was not pursued after medical opinion was provided that Colston was unlikely to live long enough for a trial to be completed. In the event, he survived for a further six years. He retired from the Senate at the end of his term on 30 June 1999.

[edit] References