Ian McLachlan

The Honourable
Ian McLachlan
AO
Ian McLachlan (far left)
45th Australian Defence Minister
In office
1996–1998
Preceded by Robert Ray
Succeeded by John Moore
Personal details
Born 2 October 1936 (1936-10-02) (age 75)
Political party Liberal Party of Australia

Ian Murray McLachlan AO (born 2 October 1936) is an Australian landowner, former first-class cricketer, and former member of the Australian House of Representatives.

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Early life

Born in North Adelaide, McLachlan was educated at St. Peters College, Adelaide, where he first displayed his cricketing prowess, and the University of Cambridge. He played 72 matches of first-class cricket for Cambridge University and South Australia between 1956 and 1964, scoring 3743 runs at an average of 31.72, with 9 centuries.

Professional life

Through inheritance, McLachlan is one of the largest landowners in Australia. His business career includes managing director of Nangwarry Pastoral Co. Pty. Ltd., deputy chairman of SA Brewing Pty. Ltd (1983–1990), director of Elders IXL Ltd. (1980–1990) and president of the National Farmers Federation (1984–1988). He was made an Officer of the Order of Australia (AO) in January 1989 for "service to primary industry".[1] He is the current president of the South Australian Cricket Association.

Political life

McLachlan was the member for Barker from 1990 until 1998 when he retired. He was Federal Minister for Defence from 1996 to 1998.[2]

It was revealed in 2006 that McLachlan was present at a meeting between John Howard and Peter Costello, arranging a handover of power after one and a half terms if Howard was allowed to become opposition leader without challenge, and then won office from the Australian Labor Party (ALP). Howard later reneged on this deal, leading to controversy and public bickering between Prime Minister Howard and Treasurer Costello.[3][4] The revelation was made by McLachlan himself and Howard later said in The Howard Years documentary series that he had decided to handover the Prime Ministership to Costello in 2006 but changed his mind as a result of the revelation of the deal. McLachlan therefore unwittingly cost Costello his final opportunity to become Prime Minister.

References

Political offices
Preceded by
Robert Ray
Minister for Defence
1996–1998
Succeeded by
John Moore
Parliament of Australia
Preceded by
James Porter
Member for Barker
1990–1998
Succeeded by
Patrick Secker