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Revision as of 22:35, 21 January 2009
Colin William (Col) Markham (born June 4, 1940) is an Australian politician. He was an Australian Labor Party member of the New South Wales Legislative Assembly from 1988 to 2003, representing the electorates of Keira (1988–1999) and Wollongong (1999–2003). He was a parliamentary secretary in the first two terms of the Carr Labor government.
Markham was born in Wollongong, and studied at West Wollongong Public School and Wollongong Junior Technical College (now Keira High School). He dropped out of school at fifteen, and took up an apprenticeship as an electrical fitter with the Electricity Commission of New South Wales. He worked in the Kemira mines for two years after the completion of his apprenticeship, before shifting to the Coalcliff mines, where he spent a further 24 years. He joined the Labor Party in response to the Australian constitutional crisis of 1975, and was active in his local branches for many years thereafter.[1]
Markham won preselection for the safe Labor seat of Keira in 1988, after the retirement of long-serving local MP Laurie Kelly. He won a narrow victory, and developed a reputation as an occasionally outspoken local MP, publicly clashing with his party over their policies on the coal industry not long after his election.[2] He was promoted into the shadow ministry in 1989, taking the position of Shadow Minister for Aboriginal Affairs, but was cut upon the election of the Carr government in 1995 after struggling to gain a profile in the role.[3][4]
Markham was appointed Parliamentary Secretary for Aboriginal Affairs after his demotion from Cabinet, and was a persistent advocate for Aboriginal issues throughout the remainder of his parliamentary career. He was the architect of early land rights legislation transferring a number of government-owned sites into the control of their traditional owners, and continually campaigned for action from the state government on Aboriginal reconcilation, ultimately resulting in the Carr government's Statement of Commitment on Aboriginal reconciliation in 1997.[5][6] He was also a frequent advocate for local workers as the job cuts of the 1990s hit the Wollongong economy hard.[7][8]
Markham had long faced rumors of a preselection challenge from the right-faction, which had been gaining increasing dominance in his region through the late 1990s. As a popular local member, however, he was tipped to be difficult to shift, and planned challenges for the 1991 and 1995 elections never eventuated.[9] He faced a much more difficult situation ahead of the 1999 election, however, when an electoral redistribution saw the right-wing faction gain firm control of the electorate's Labor branches. A deal was struck by which Markham would instead contest preselection for the neighbouring seat of Wollongong, held by fellow left-winger Gerry Sullivan. Markham won preselection for Wollongong, but his treatment by the party caused a local backlash, with Wollongong councillor Dave Martin running for and nearly winning Markham's old seat of Keira as an independent.[10][11] Sullivan took the preselection to the Supreme Court but lost, and publicly considered running as an independent before deciding against it.[12][13]
He was reappointed as Parliamentary Secretary for Aboriginal Affairs after the election, and acted as a strong proponent of Sorry Day and National Reconciliation Week.[14][15] He faced speculation about another challenge for his seat in 2002, when it was leaked to the press that his name was on an internal party "hit-list" for the next election.[16] Long a target of the right wing, the faction had been especially angered by his refusal to cross a union picket line at Parliament House in opposition to Carr government workers compensation changes that were deeply unpopular in Markham's blue-collar electorate.[17] The speculation received a sharp response from the trade union movement, with the local divisions of six major unions threatening protests and support for independent candidacies if Markham was toppled by head office.[18] Markham's impending axing took on federal consequences when angry local unions and left-wing groups directed their resources against the right faction candidate Labor had endorsed for a by-election in the federal seat of Cunningham; in a shock result, Green candidate Michael Organ won the seat after a disastrous Labor campaign.[19]
Markham received a late endorsement from Premier Bob Carr ahead of the 2002 preselection vote, but this was not enough to sway the right-dominated preselectors, who voted for Noreen Hay, a local left faction figure who defected to the right soon after.[20][21][22] He retired at the election rather than run as an independent, and Hay held the seat, albeit with a 13% swing against her. Tickets to his farewell dinner at the WIN Entertainment Centre sold out five days before it was held.[23]
References
- ^ Heinzman, Sarah. "Col's calling". Illawarra Mercury, February 21, 2004.
- ^ Lagan, Bernard. "Boos for govt's new deal on coal". Sydney Morning Herald, October 4, 1988.
- ^ Moore, Matthew. "Carr is rebuffed by rebel factions". Sydney Morning Herald, May 11, 1988.
- ^ Totaro, Paola. "Right-wing brawl first test for Carr". Sydney Morning Herald, April 1, 1995.
- ^ Lawson, Michael. "Actions speak louder - Markham". Illawarra Mercury, November 28, 1997.
- ^ Field, Anthony. "A dream realised for Aborigines". Illawarra Mercury, July 23, 2004.
- ^ Lawson, Michael. "Marvellous view moves Markham". Illawarra Mercury, December 22, 1997.
- ^ Tindall, Ron. "Foster potential, don't fob us off, says Markham". Illawarra Mercury, August 4, 1997.
- ^ "Editorial". Illawarra Mercury, July 17, 1997.
- ^ Carty, Lisa. "When two into one won't go". Illawarra Mercury, November 19, 1998.
- ^ Humphries, David. "Party dealing puts Shaw back on ticket". Illawarra Mercury, November 20, 1998.
- ^ Carty, Lisa. "Court dismisses Sullivan appeal". Illawarra Mercury, March 4, 1999.
- ^ McInerney, Paul. "Dumped ALP man elects to go quietly". Illawarra Mercury, March 9, 1999.
- ^ Bissett, Kelvin. "Carr's little helpers". Daily Telegraph, May 1, 1999.
- ^ Ellis, Greg. "Sorry is not a dirty word". Illawarra Mercury, May 28, 1999.
- ^ McInerney, Paul. "Angry Col says he's not Markham time". Illawarra Mercury, March 13, 1999.
- ^ West, Andrew. "How the Illawarra is poisoning Labor". Illawarra Mercury, August 18, 1999.
- ^ O'Connor, Kerrie. "Left's ultimatum to end branch stacking". Illawarra Mercury, May 23, 2002.
- ^ West, Andrew. "Labor feels like it's going, going, Gong". Illawarra Mercury, October 13, 2002.
- ^ Carty, Lisa. "D-day: Carr backs Markham in preselection battle". Illawarra Mercury, December 14, 2002.
- ^ Peterson, Anthony. "Politician's little list sees Grumpy Old ALP Men ousted". Illawarra Mercury, December 17, 2002.
- ^ Christodoulou, Mario. "Doing hard Labor". Illawarra Mercury, June 14, 2008.
- ^ Heinzman, Sarah. "Col's calling". Illawarra Mercury, February 21, 2004.