Tony Crook | |
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Member of the Australian Parliament for O'Connor |
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Incumbent | |
Assumed office 21 August 2010 |
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Preceded by | Wilson Tuckey |
Personal details | |
Born | 23 June 1959 Merredin, Western Australia |
Political party | National Party of Western Australia |
Website | http://www.tonycrook.com.au/ |
Anthony John "Tony" Crook (born 23 June 1959) is an Australian politician. He has been the member of the Australian House of Representatives seat of O'Connor for the National Party of Western Australia since the 2010 federal election. Crook served as chairman of the Western Division of the Royal Flying Doctor Service for 10 years until his retirement in 2009.
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Crook was born and raised in Merredin in the wheatbelt region, where his family were pioneer farmers in the area.[1]
Crook once owned Woolibar station, a 140,000 hectares (350,000 acres) sheep station approximately 45 km south of Kalgoorlie and sold the business in 2006 to become part of an agricultural consultancy in Kalgoorlie with his brother Brett.[2]
In the 2007 federal election, Crook stood for the WA Nationals for a Senate seat but was unsuccessful. He also stood for the seat of Kalgoorlie at the 2008 state election, losing to independent John Bowler.
Following the redistribution of O'Connor, where the seat lost the Mid West region and gained the Goldfields-Esperance region, Crook ran against Liberal incumbent Wilson Tuckey at the 2010 election where a hung parliament resulted. The Nationals campaigned in Western Australia as an independent party which would not "report, answer and take direction from Warren Truss".[3]
Crook won with 28.85 percent of the primary vote, a swing to the WA Nationals of 19.68 percent, finishing with 53.56 percent of the two-party preferred vote.[4] Crook campaigned on a platform of a Royalties for Regions policy on a national level, is against the Mineral Resource Rent Tax, and sought these interests in his discussions with the major parties over who would get Crook's confidence and supply vote to form government.[5][6][7]
Crook stated he would sit as a crossbencher advocating the interests of Western Australia. "I'm clearly an independent", he stated to reporters. "I can sit on the crossbenches quite comfortably".[5] "Tony Abbott urged me to consider my position and said to consider that I am a member of the Nationals. But I highlighted to him that although we are a federated body, the WA Nationals are an autonomous political organisation". Crook said he had been disappointed by media coverage of the hung parliament, which has included his seat of O'Connor in the number of seats won by the Coalition. "In every news report and press report we see, my number is being allocated in with the Coalition and it shouldn't be" he said. Crook's separation from the Coalition puts him at odds with Nationals MPs from the eastern states.[8][9][10] The National Party of Western Australia prior to and subsequent to the election are in no federal Coalition agreement, Crook has stated he is a crossbencher, and he and the WA Nationals are open to negotiating with either side to form government.[11][12][13] On 6 September Crook declared his support for the Coalition on confidence and supply, but would otherwise sit on the crossbench.[14] On 27 September Crook announced he would not be attending federal National Party of Australia party room meetings.[15][16] Since his election, Crook at times has voted for federal Labor government policies in parliament contrary to the official position of the National Party of Australia.[17]
Parliament of Australia | ||
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Preceded by Wilson Tuckey |
Member for O'Connor 2010–present |
Incumbent |
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