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Les Norman (politician)

Australian politician (1913–1997)


Australian politician (1913–1997)

FieldValue
nameLes Norman
imageLes_Norman.jpg
constituency_AMGlen Iris
assemblyVictorian Legislative
term_start8 November 1947
term_end5 December 1952
predecessorIan McLaren
successorThomas Hollway
birth_nameLeslie George Norman
birth_date
birth_placeMelbourne, Victoria, Australia
death_date
partyLiberal Party
Liberal and Country Party
spouseRosa Glover
occupationAccountant
allegianceAustralia
branchAustralian Army
serviceyears1941–1945
rankLieutenant
unit8th Division

| honorific-prefix = | honorific-suffix = Liberal and Country Party Leslie George Norman (3 September 1913 – 5 July 1997) was an Australian politician. Norman represented Glen Iris in the Victorian Legislative Assembly for four years, and led the Liberal and Country Party from 1951–1952. Norman was a staunch Methodist and an equally staunch conservative. He held strong small government views, and had little patience for the "socialism" of the Labor Party.

Born in Melbourne, Norman attended primary school in Malvern and went on to University High School. Upon graduation at the age of 15, he joined an accounting firm as a clerk. He took night classes in accountancy during his employment there, and at the age of 22, left the firm to set up his own practice, Norman and Cartledge.

At the outbreak of World War II, Norman enlisted in the Second Australian Imperial Force and was posted in Malaya with the Australian 8th Division. He was captured in Singapore in 1942, and forced to sit out the rest of the war in Changi Prison. The prison at the time also housed Wilfrid Kent Hughes, Tom Mitchell, and William Leggatt, and the four would often discuss politics together. Norman entered the war as a Private, and left as a Lieutenant. After the war, Norman resumed his accounting practice.

In 1947, Norman won the electorate of Glen Iris. He became the Government Whip under Thomas Hollway in 1948. The Hollway government was defeated by the Country Party in 1950, and in 1951 Norman took over leadership from Hollway, amidst internal dissent over Hollway's plans to redistribute the seats of Victoria and reduce the power of rural electorates.

Norman's reign was short-lived, however, and he lost his seat in 1952 to a challenge from Hollway. He left politics and returned to his accounting practice. He also became active with various charities, acting as Vice-President of the Australian Red Cross and, as a member of Moral Re-Armament, working towards reconciliation with the Japanese.

Norman died in 1997 at the age of 83, and is survived by his wife Nina, ex-wife Rosa, and children Douglas and Anne.

References

title=Member for Glen Iris| before=Ian McLaren| after=Thomas Hollway| years=1947–1952| title=Leader of the Liberal and Country Party in Victoria| before=Thomas Hollway| after=Trevor Oldham| years=1951–1952|

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