Rory McEwen (born 1948), Australian politician, was the independent member for the seats of Gordon (1997-2002) and Mount Gambier (2002-2010) in the South Australian House of Assembly.
Before entering politics McEwen had been a TAFE Teacher/Administrator and much experience in local government including Chair of the Grant Council, Chair of the South-East Local Government Association, and Chair of the Greater Green Triangle Regional Development Association.
At the 1997 election, when Liberal Party member for Mount Gambier Harold Allison retired, it was widely expected that the Liberal preselection would go to Grant District Council chairman Rory McEwen and had also received positive write-ups by The Advertiser as an "experienced political operative", but he somehow lost to Scott Dixon, a self-employed Mount Gambier sawmiller. McEwen ran as an independent and won only a handful of votes ahead of the Labor Party to grab second place, and then by 0.1 percent sneaked ahead of Dixon on Labor preferences to win the seat. The election saw him and two other conservative independents holding the balance of power in the Olsen Liberal minority government. McEwen made a formal pledge to support the Liberals on matters of confidence and supply.
McEwen was comfortably re-elected in the 2002 election. He was initially highly critical of Peter Lewis's support of a Labor minority government. But later, McEwen formally supported Labor when he accepted a specially created fourteenth cabinet post in November 2002, at various times being the Minister for Local Government, Forests, Industry, Trade, Regional Development, Small Business, Agriculture, and Food and Fisheries, with a promise that he would retain a cabinet position after the 2006 election.
MeEwen was involved in a media controversy leading up to the 2006 election. The following paragraph is a quote from the site pollbludgercom:
There were fears of a voter backlash in the 2006 election due to McEwen siding with Labor, and he was presented with a strong challenge by Liberal candidate Peter Gandolfi. His primary vote dropped about 20 percent, however he finished 1.7 percent ahead of the Liberals on first preference and 6.2 percent on the two-party vote. As promised he kept his cabinet position in the new majority government.[2]
In 2007, the Liberals placed the Rann government under pressure over the non-disclosure of donations and gifts given to McEwen of which he was not required to disclose.
McEwen announced he would retire at the 2010 election, and resigned from cabinet in early 2009. It was expected the seat would revert to the Liberal Party candidate, however independent candidate Don Pegler won the seat.