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Michael Daley

Australian politician


Australian politician

FieldValue
honorific-prefixThe Honourable
nameMichael Daley
honorific-suffixMP
imageMichael Daley portrait 2024.jpg
imagesize230px
captionOfficial portrait, 2024
officeAttorney General of New South Wales
premierChris Minns
term_start28 March 2023
predecessorMark Speakman
office1Leader of the Opposition in New South Wales
premier1Gladys Berejiklian
deputy1Penny Sharpe
term_start110 November 2018
term_end125 March 2019
predecessor1Luke Foley
successor1Jodi McKay
office2Leader of the New South Wales Labor Party
deputy2Penny Sharpe
term_start210 November 2018
term_end225 March 2019
predecessor2Luke Foley
successor2Penny Sharpe (acting)
Jodi McKay
{{Collapsed infobox section beginPrevious ministerial positionstitlestyleborder:1px dashed lightgrey}}
office3Minister for Police
and Finance
premier3Nathan Rees
Kristina Keneally
term_start317 November 2009
term_end328 March 2011
predecessor3Himself
successor3Mike Gallacher (Police)
Greg Pearce (Finance)
office4Minister for Police
premier4Nathan Rees
term_start414 September 2009
term_end417 November 2009
predecessor4Tony Kelly
successor4Himself
office5Minister for Roads
premier5Nathan Rees
term_start58 September 2008
term_end514 September 2009
predecessor5Eric Roozendaal
successor5David Borger
office6Member of the
New South Wales Parliament
for Maroubra
term_start617 September 2005
predecessor6Bob Carr
office7Deputy Mayor of Randwick
1blankname7Mayor
1namedata7Dominic Sullivan
term_start7September 2000
term_end720 April 2004
predecessor7Shane Barber
successor7Bruce Notley-Smith
office8Councillor of the Randwick City Council
for South Ward
term_start89 September 1995
term_end813 September 2008
birth_date
birth_placeMaroubra, New South Wales, Australia
partyLabor
professionLawyer
website
educationMarcellin College Randwick
alma_materBarristers and Solicitors Admission Board

| honorific-prefix = The Honourable | honorific-suffix = MP Jodi McKay and Finance Kristina Keneally Greg Pearce (Finance) New South Wales Parliament for Maroubra for South Ward Michael John Daley (born 1 November 1965) is an Australian politician who has served as the attorney general of New South Wales since 2023. He previously served as the leader of the opposition and leader of the New South Wales Labor Party from 2018 to 2019. He has been a member of the New South Wales Legislative Assembly for Maroubra since 2005.

Early career

In 1998, having completed his legal studies he was admitted to the Supreme Court of New South Wales as a legal practitioner and began to pursue a career as a lawyer, and worked for a year in a law firm in central Sydney before spending five years as a senior in-house lawyer with NRMA Motoring and Services.

Daley was elected as a councillor to Randwick City Council in 1995 and served as deputy mayor from 2000 to 2004.

Political career

Daley is aligned with the Labor Right faction. He was elected to represent Maroubra for the Australian Labor Party on 17 September 2005, replacing previous Labor member Bob Carr, who announced his retirement from politics. Daley served on the backbench until the elevation of Nathan Rees as premier of New South Wales in September 2008 when Daley became the Minister for Roads on 8 September 2008. Daley held this position until a cabinet reshuffle on 14 September 2009, when he was subsequently appointed Minister for Police and Minister for Finance, positions he held until 4 December 2009.

When Kristina Keneally became Premier in December 2009 he remained as Minister for Police and Minister for Finance until the 2011 election, where he was one of just 20 Labor MPs elected. Daley was believed to be a potential candidate for the Labor leadership, however, he did not contest it. As a result, John Robertson was elected unopposed as Keneally's replacement, and Daley was appointed as Shadow Treasurer and Shadow Minister for Finance and Services in the Robertson shadow ministry and the subsequent Foley shadow ministry from 11 April 2011 to 10 March 2016 and 28 March 2014, respectively.

In March 2016 he was appointed Shadow Minister for Gaming and Racing, Shadow Minister for Planning and Infrastructure which he held on to until 27 November 2018. He also served as Deputy Leader of the Opposition from 7 March 2016 before being elected as the Leader of the Opposition on 10 November 2018.

Leader of the Opposition

Following Luke Foley's resignation of the role, Daley nominated for the role of New South Wales Labor leader and Leader of the New South Wales Opposition. On 10 November 2018, Daley won the leadership election against Chris Minns 33 votes to 12, and was elected as the Leader of the Labor Party in New South Wales and became the 38th NSW Leader of the Opposition.

On 19 March 2019, a few days before the state election, a video from September 2018 surfaced in which Daley made comments about Asian immigration in Sydney. Daley said "Our young children will flee and who are they being replaced with? They are being replaced by young people from typically Asia with PhDs," and "So there's a transformation happening in Sydney now where our kids are moving out and foreigners are moving in and taking their jobs". Daley apologised from his comments, stating "What I was referring to was housing affordability in Sydney ... I could've expressed myself better, no offence was meant." The party was unsuccessful in the election a few days later, and Daley subsequently stood aside as leader and withdrew his candidacy for the subsequent leadership ballot after initially stating that he would contest it. Jodi McKay became the new permanent as party leader and opposition leader in June 2019 after Daley's resignation.

On 30 May 2021, following the resignation of McKay as party leader, Daley announced he would run again for party leadership. On 4 June 2021, he dropped out of the leadership contest, allowing Chris Minns to be elected leader unopposed.

Personal life

Daley is of Irish Catholic background. He was educated at Marcellin College, Randwick, finishing in 1983. He spent 13 years as a customs officer with the Australian Customs Service, during which time he studied law at night.

Daley married Christina Ithier in 2005 whom he met "at a photocopier" at his legal firm in 1997. She had two children from a previous marriage whom Daley counts as his own. He and Christina have since had two other children.

References

References

  1. {{cite NSW Parliament
  2. Visentin, Lisa. (10 November 2018). "Michael Daley elected NSW Labor Party leader, promising to 'press the reset button'". [[The Sydney Morning Herald]].
  3. (30 March 2011). "Daley 'won't contest' NSW Labor leadership". [[The Sydney Morning Herald]].
  4. (30 March 2011). "John Robertson elected NSW Labor leader unopposed". [[The Daily Telegraph (Sydney).
  5. (2018-11-10). "NSW Labor elects paperboy turned lawyer Michael Daley as new leader". ABC News.
  6. "NSW Labor leader Michael Daley apologises for foreign workers comment".
  7. (18 March 2019). "Michael Daley claims Asian workers taking young people's jobs in Sydney".
  8. (19 March 2019). "'They've accepted what I've said': Daley forced to explain himself over immigrant comments". Sydney Morning Herald.
  9. Han, Alexandra Smith, Esther. (25 March 2019). "'I don't want to be a distraction': Michael Daley stands aside as NSW Labor leader".
  10. McKinnell, Jamie. (26 March 2019). "Michael Daley abandons NSW Labor leadership race".
  11. (30 May 2021). "Michael Daley to make another tilt at NSW Labor leadership". ABC News.
  12. Raper, Ashleigh. "Kogarah MP Chris Minns to be NSW Opposition Leader after Michael Daley pulls out". ABC News.
  13. McGowan, Michael. (8 November 2018). "Michael Daley tipped to succeed Luke Foley as NSW Labor leader".
  14. Snow, Deborah. (2019-01-12). "A Labor government will 'civilise the place', says leader Michael Daley". [[The Sydney Morning Herald]].
  15. Daley, Michael. (2005-10-12). "Inaugural speeches: Michael Daley". [[Parliament of NSW]].
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