Fiona Patten
Fiona Patten MLC | |
---|---|
Member of the Victorian Legislative Council for Northern Metropolitan | |
Assumed office 29 November 2014 | |
Leader of the Australian Sex Party | |
Assumed office 5 December 2009 | |
Preceded by | Position created |
Personal details | |
Born |
1964 (age 50–51) Canberra, Australia |
Political party | Australian Sex Party |
Residence | Melbourne |
Fiona Heather Patten (born 1964) is an Australian politician. She has been the leader of the Australian Sex Party since its foundation in 2009, and has represented the party in Northern Metropolitan Region region of the Victorian Legislative Council since the 2014 Victorian election. Patten was previously the CEO of the Eros Association, the peak body representing "adult shops" (retailers of pornography/erotica, sex toys and other sex-related products).[1][2]
Elections
1992 ACT election
In 1992, Patten contested the second election for representation in the multi-member single constituency Australian Capital Territory Legislative Assembly on a ticket called the Hare-Clark Independent Party with sitting member, Craig Duby. Both Duby and Patten were unsuccessful in being elected.[3]
2009 Higgins by-election
Patten contested the seat of Higgins in Victoria at the 2009 by-election. She received over 3 percent of the vote, placing her 4th out of 10 candidates. Her campaign was based on opposing Greens candidate Clive Hamilton's proposal for an ISP-level Internet filter which would block access to websites containing RC-rated content—that is, legal material which is banned from sale, trade or public exhibition due to its extreme nature.
Patten remains a prominent critic of the proposal. She appeared in the Four Corners episode "Access Denied" arguing that it would include blocking access to adult films such as Pirates—refused classification because of a technicality—that do not depict sexual violence, are extremely popular overseas and are available for download on dozens of websites.[4] According to research mentioned in the episode, it is unviable for the filter to block access to more than a thousand or so individual web pages.
2010 federal election
The party contested all states and territories, except for Tasmania and the Australian Capital Territory, in the Senate and six of 150 House of Representatives seats at the 2010 federal election. The party won 2.04 percent of the national Senate vote, over 250,000 first preferences.[5] After the major parties and the Australian Greens, the Sex Party during the vote count were "neck and neck" with the Family First Party for the fourth place in the national Senate vote.[6] The party "outpolled several more prominent minor parties and came within about 10,000 votes of Family First for the Senate in Victoria".[7] After the party's first federal election contest, Patten claimed that the Sex Party was "now the major minor party in Australian politics":
We've polled better than the Greens did in their first federal election and believe that our vision of Australia as the most socially progressive country in the world is equal to the Greens environmental messages of 20 years ago.[8]
Whilst the Sex Party did not win any seats, their preferences were substantially beneficial to the Greens who won a Senate seat in every state for the first time.[9][10]
2010 Victorian election
Patten contested the Northern Metropolitan Region in the Victorian Legislative Council at the 2010 Victorian state election.[11]
2012 Melbourne by-election
Patten contested the 2012 Melbourne state by-election, coming third out of 16 candidates, receiving 6.6 percent of the vote, in the absence of a Liberal Party candidate. She says the party preferenced Labor ahead of the Greens due to the "anti-sex feminist movement" within the Greens,[12][13] but that future preferences may change again.[14]
2013 federal election
Patten was again a Sex Party candidate for a senate seat in Victoria at the 2013 federal election.
2014 Victorian election
Patten successfully contested the Northern Metropolitan Region in the Victorian Legislative Council during the 2014 Victorian state election becoming the first candidate for the Australian Sex Party to be elected to parliament. [15]
References
- ↑ http://www.theage.com.au/victoria/house-of-mayhem-micro-parties-to-flex-their-muscle-on-spring-street-20141213-126h5a.html
- ↑ Sex flirts with politics: Herald Sun 16 November 2008
- ↑ "List of candidates". 1992 Election. ACT Electoral Commission. 1992. Retrieved 3 August 2010.
- ↑ Quentin McDermott (7 May 2010). "Access Denied". Four Corners. ABC.
- ↑ First Preferences for the Senate – 2010 federal election: AEC
- ↑ Australian Sex Party does well: AustralianNews.net 24 August 2010
- ↑ Australian Sex Party picks up votes: Herald Sun 24 August 2010
- ↑ Sex Party Now The Major Minor Party in Australian Politics: Sex Party website 23 August 2010
- ↑ Greens win seats in every state: SMH 23 August 2010
- ↑ 2010 election Senate preference flow results: ABC
- ↑ Sex Party hoping to get lucky in Victoria: SMH 25 November 2010
- ↑ Greens snub could cost preferences in Melbourne by-election: Herald Sun 19 July 2012
- ↑ The Melbourne byelection special: 3AW 19 July 2012
- ↑ Official by-election outcome still days away: Yahoo News 23 July 2012
- ↑ http://www.abc.net.au/news/2014-12-16/minor-parties-to-make-up-almost-one-third-victoria-upper-house/5970414
External links
- SexParty.org.au – homepage
- Sex Party vs Family First debate: Sunrise 2 August 2010
- Fiona Patten at the Internet Movie Database
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