The Honourable Wilson Tuckey MP |
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Member of the Australian Parliament for O'Connor |
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In office 18 October 1980 – 21 August 2010 |
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Preceded by | New Division |
Succeeded by | Tony Crook |
Minister for Forestry and Conservation | |
In office 1998–2001 |
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Prime Minister | John Howard |
Preceded by | New title |
Succeeded by | Ian Macdonald |
Minister for Regional Services, Territories and Local Government | |
In office 2001–2003 |
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Prime Minister | John Howard |
Preceded by | Ian Macdonald |
Succeeded by | Ian Campbell |
Personal details | |
Born | 10 July 1935 Perth, Western Australia, Australia |
Political party | Liberal Party of Australia |
Website | Official Parliamentary homepage |
Charles Wilson Tuckey (born 10 July 1935), a former Australian federal politician, was a Member of the Australian House of Representatives representing the seat of O'Connor in Western Australia for the Liberal Party from 1980 until 2010.
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Wilson Tuckey was born in Perth, Western Australia, and was a businessman and hotelier before entering politics.
Tuckey was a Town Councillor in Carnarvon 1964–65 and a member of Carnarvon Shire Council 1969–70, 1971–73 and 1977–79. He was Shire President 1965–69.
In the federal Parliament he was a member of the Opposition Shadow Ministry 1984–89 and 1993–96 and Deputy Manager of Opposition Business in the House 1988–89 and 1993–94. He served as Minister for Forestry and Conservation and Minister Assisting the Prime Minister 1998–2001 and Minister for Regional Services, Territories and Local Government 2002–2003.
Tuckey was one of the most controversial figures in Australian federal politics. In 1967, while a publican in Carnarvon, he was convicted of assault after striking an Aboriginal man with a length of steel cable.[1][2] It was alleged that the man was being pinned to the ground at the time.[3] He has had the nickname "Ironbar" ever since.
In 1986 Tuckey taunted the then Labor Treasurer, Paul Keating, in Parliament about a former girlfriend called "Christine," leading Keating to call him "a piece of criminal garbage." [4] In one notorious exchange, Tuckey told Keating: "You are an idiot, you are a hopeless nong", to which Keating replied: "Shut up! Sit down and shut up, you pig... Why do you not shut up, you clown?... This man has a criminal intellect... this clown continues to interject in perpetuity." [5] A furious Keating demanded that newly installed Liberal Party leader John Howard discipline Tuckey, but he refused. Keating then promised to make Howard "wear his leadership like a crown of thorns", and the relationship between Keating and Howard, previously a civil one, deteriorated to the point where the two men refused to speak to one another.[3]
In 1989 Tuckey was one of the leaders of the plot to depose John Howard as Liberal Party leader and replace him with Andrew Peacock. After the success of the plot, Tuckey boasted about it on television, privately infuriating Howard.
Tuckey addressed an AIDS conference and opened by saying "you don't catch AIDS, you let somebody give it to you".[2][6]
As Minister for Forestry, Tuckey angered conservation groups through his support for the forestry industry. In 2002 he blamed the environmentalist movement for Australia's severe bushfire problem, saying that their opposition to controlled burning in national parks increased the risk of fires.[2][7]
Tuckey's demise as a minister came in August 2003 when it was revealed that he had written to Patrick Conlon, who was Police Minister in South Australia, on ministerial letterhead, asking Conlon to "review" his son's conviction on a traffic charge.[2] Prime Minister Howard said that Tuckey's actions were foolish but refused to dismiss him. Tuckey resigned as a minister shortly afterwards to return to the backbench.[8]
In 2005 when the Australian parliament voted to pass a motion asking Singaporean authorities that Van Tuong Nguyen not be executed for drug smuggling, Tuckey was the only member of parliament not to support it.[9]
Tuckey was often quoted in the media as supporting free markets and less government intervention in the economy. He is also well known for criticising the National Party on a number of issues. He has been the most outspoken critic of AWB in Federal Parliament and has led the push for it to be stripped of its export monopoly for wheat. Tuckey labelled National Party politicians who continue to support the single desk system as "drongos".[10] He also labelled National Party senator Barnaby Joyce a "lightweight" for arguing in favour of foreign ownership restrictions to be placed upon Medibank Private after privatization.[11]
In August 2006, Tuckey had a public argument with Labor leader Kim Beazley over new immigration laws, ending with Tuckey calling Beazley a "fat so and so".[2][12]
In August 2007, Tuckey sent a fax to John Howard and several Liberal MPs suggesting the Prime Minister relinquish the leadership.[13]
In January 2008, Queensland Aboriginal activist Sam Watson branded Tuckey an "extreme racist" after Tuckey criticised the decision to display traditional dancers from the Aboriginal tribe which historically resides near the Parliament House in the opening of Federal Parliament. Watson concluded, "Mr Tuckey and his extremist racist views really do belong to another generation."[14]
On 13 February 2008, Tuckey walked out during the opening of the 42nd Australian Federal Parliament immediately after prayers, and pointedly before the Prime Minister Kevin Rudd made a motion of apology to the Stolen Generation. He was one of five Coalition MPs not present in the chamber, thereby boycotting the motion.[2][15] On the steps of parliament, Tuckey was sarcastic about what the apology would achieve for indigenous people:
"I'm there to say hallelujah. Tomorrow there'll be no petrol sniffing, tomorrow little girls can sleep in their beds without any concern — it's all fixed. The Rudd spin will fix it all. I've read it, I'm convinced. I think it's wonderful."[15]
In May 2008, Tuckey was expelled from the house for 24 hours after breaching standards. His remarks against the speaker arose during a heated question time in relation to the Rudd Government's 'Fuel Watch Scheme'.[16] On 24 September 2008, Tuckey was again expelled from the house, this time for one hour, for an outburst during House of Representatives Question Time.
In March 2010, Tuckey said that acknowledging traditional landowners at official events was a "farce" and that he had "never thanked anyone for the right to be on the soil that is Australian".[17]
At the 2010 federal election, Tuckey lost his seat of O'Connor to the Nationals WA candidate Tony Crook.[18][19] Results in O'Connor from 1980 had Tuckey on a two-party preferred vote of 62 to 75 percent against Labor at each election. Tuckey won the seat at the 2007 federal election on a primary vote of 46 percent and a two-party margin of 67 percent against Labor. In 2010, Tuckey suffered a post-redistribution primary vote swing of 10 percent and a two-candidate swing of 20 percent, finishing on a primary vote of 38 percent and a two-candidate vote of 46 percent against Crook.[20]
Tuckey broke his self-imposed silence after the election, verbally attacking Crook on a range of fronts.[21] Tuckey described Crook as "a nobody who would be lucky to have his relatives turn up to hear his maiden speech in parliament".[22]
Defeated at age 75, he was the then oldest member of the Australian Parliament.
Political offices | ||
---|---|---|
New title | Minister for Forestry and Conservation 1998–2001 |
Succeeded by Ian Macdonald |
Preceded by Ian Macdonald |
Minister for Regional Services, Territories and Local Government 2001–2003 |
Succeeded by Ian Campbell |
Parliament of Australia | ||
New division | Member for O'Connor 1980–2010 |
Succeeded by Tony Crook |