From Surf Wiki (app.surf) — the open knowledge base
Michael Wooldridge (politician)
Australian doctor and politician
Australian doctor and politician
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| honorific-prefix | The Honourable |
| name | Dr Michael Wooldridge |
| office | Minister for Health and Aged Care |
| primeminister | John Howard |
| term_start | 21 October 1998 |
| term_end | 26 November 2001 |
| predecessor | Himself |
| successor | Kay Patterson |
| office2 | Minister for Health and Family Services |
| primeminister2 | John Howard |
| term_start2 | 11 March 1996 |
| term_end2 | 21 October 1998 |
| predecessor2 | Carmen Lawrence |
| successor2 | Himself |
| office3 | Deputy Leader of the Liberal Party |
| leader3 | John Hewson |
| term_start3 | 23 March 1993 |
| term_end3 | 23 May 1994 |
| predecessor3 | Peter Reith |
| successor3 | Peter Costello |
| constituency_MP4 | Casey |
| parliament4 | Australian |
| predecessor4 | Bob Halverson |
| successor4 | Tony Smith |
| term_start4 | 3 October 1998 |
| term_end4 | 8 October 2001 |
| constituency_MP5 | Chisholm |
| parliament5 | Australian |
| predecessor5 | Helen Mayer |
| successor5 | Anna Burke |
| term_start5 | 11 July 1987 |
| term_end5 | 3 October 1998 |
| birth_name | Michael Richard Lewis Wooldridge |
| birth_date | |
| birth_place | Melbourne, Victoria, Australia |
| nationality | Australian |
| party | Liberal |
| relations | Mary Wooldridge (sister) |
| alma_mater | Monash University |
| honorific-prefix = The Honourable | honorific-suffix = Michael Richard Lewis Wooldridge (born 7 November 1956) is an Australian doctor, company director, and former politician. He served as deputy leader of the Liberal Party from 1993 to 1994, under John Hewson. In the Howard government, he held ministerial office as Minister for Health and Family Services (1996–1998) and Health and Aged Care (1998–2001). He represented the Liberals in the House of Representatives as the member for Chisholm (1987–1998) and Casey (1998–2001).
Early years
Wooldridge was born in Melbourne on 7 November 1956. The son of a real estate agent, he grew up in the suburb of Surrey Hills and attended Scotch College, Melbourne. He went on to Monash University, initially studying economics and politics before transferring to a science degree and then studying medicine. He graduated in 1981 and completed his residency at The Alfred Hospital.
Federal political career
Wooldridge was elected to the House of Representatives at the 1987 federal election, winning the seat of Chisholm from the incumbent Australian Labor Party (ALP) MP Helen Mayer.
During his time in Opposition he was Deputy Leader of the Liberal Party and therefore the Deputy Leader of the Opposition from March 1993 to May 1994. He was 36 years old when he became deputy opposition leader, becoming the youngest person to hold the position. In May 1994, Liberal Leader John Hewson called a spill for both the leader's and deputy's positions. Hewson lost to Alexander Downer while Wooldridge withdrew at the last minute as it became clear he did not have the numbers to beat Downer's running mate Peter Costello.
Wooldridge's demise as deputy leader came as a result of an opinion poll that showed only 4% of voters preferred him as Liberal leader despite Wooldridge himself stating he had no desire to become leader. In response to this poll, Wooldridge argued on The 7.30 Report that 4% was a good result for a deputy leader as the deputy leader was not meant to be an alternative leader. Ironically the man who replaced him as deputy leader, Costello, did not succeed in his ambitions to become leader and eventually became the party's longest serving deputy leader.
As well as expressing no desire to become leader, Wooldridge as deputy leader did not request to become Shadow Treasurer, making him one of a few deputy leaders who never held the Treasury portfolio either in government or in opposition.
Wooldridge's reason for not taking up Treasury was his belief that his strength was in social policy area and that Treasury would take him "a year to get up to speed".
In 1996, the Liberal and National Parties were elected to Government and Wooldridge served as Minister for Health and Family Services from 1996 to 1998 and Minister for Health and Aged Care from 1998 up to his retirement in 2001. During his last term, he transferred from his marginal seat of Chisholm to the somewhat friendlier seat of Casey.
During this time he instituted significant and widespread changes to general practice. By setting up and responding to the report: "General Practice, Responding to the Future With Partnerships", he commenced a reform process that cemented the divisions of general practice as change agents, took responsibility for training GPs away from the RACGP and into the hands of an independent body (General Practice Education and Training), and instituted the Practice Incentives Program. He was forced to make a public apology to the President of the Australian Medical Association at the time, Kerryn Phelps in 2001{{cite news | access-date = 2 July 2001}} for publicly claiming she had no medical qualifications. During Woolridge's term as Health Minister, he was criticised for having close links with multinational drug company, Pfizer that impacted the independence of the Pharmaceutical Benefits Advisory Committee (PBAC). Wooldridge was also criticised for appointing Pat Clear, a former executive of Glaxo-Wellcome Australia who had recently retired as head of Medicines Australia (then known as the Australian Pharmaceutical Manufacturers' Association) to the committee of the PBAC, prompting the immediate resignation of the Chair of the committee, Emeritus Professor Don Birkett, and leading to the refusal of five of the other committee members to be reappointed.
Career after politics
In 2002, Wooldridge's contract with the Royal Australian College of General Practitioners was terminated due to allegations from the Australian Medical Association and the Federal Opposition that his involvement in the allocation of the $5,000,000 as well with his recent retirement as Health Minister represented a conflict of interest; in 2003 the parties settled and Wooldridge received a $382,500 payout. In 2006, Wooldridge was appointed 'Lead Independent Director' of the ASX listed Australian Pharmaceuticals Industry Limited. In September 2009, Wooldridge was invited to join a panel hosted by CSL Limited "a major manufacturer [of flu vaccine] in a US$2 billion influenza industry" hosted by the company to dispel myths about swine flu vaccination.
Wooldridge has served on the Boards of Resonance Health Ltd, Dia-b Tech Limited (resigned in 2009, company since de-listed) and a Director of CogState Ltd. He is currently Chairman of Neurosciences Australia, Healthsource Australia (Ministerial Advisory Committee on AIDS, Sexual Health and Hepatitis), the CRC for Mental Health and the Oral Health Cooperative Research Centre. He is also Associate Professor at the University of Melbourne.
In December 2013, Wooldridge and four other directors of Australian Property Custodian Holdings Ltd (APCHL) were found liable by the Federal Court for breaching their duties as officers of APCHL. APCHL was the responsible entity of the Prime Retirement and Aged Care Property Trust (Prime Trust), a managed investment scheme which owned retirement villages in Queensland, NSW and Victoria. APCHL collapsed in 2010 when administrators were appointed owing investors approximately $550 million. On 2 December 2014 he was banned as a company director for more than two years over his role in Prime Trust. Other directors, including founder Bill Lewski, received bans up to 15 years.
Wooldridge has also served on the board of the anti-wind energy activism organisation, the Waubra Foundation, along with other prominent anti-wind energy activists, including Sarah Laurie, Peter Mitchell, and Kathy Russell. The Waubra Foundation promotes the view that wind turbines cause ill health. Wooldridge and family are objectors to the Bald Hills wind farm in Gippsland Victoria.
Michael Wooldridge is the brother of Mary Wooldridge, Mental Health Minister in the Victorian State Government 2010–14.
References
References
- (29 March 1993). "A champion of the middle grounds finds his feet". The Canberra Times.
- (24 July 1987). "Liberals win Chisholm". The Canberra Times.
- Church, Nathan. (8 April 2021). "Youngest and oldest parliamentarians: a quick guide". Parliamentary Library of Australia.
- Brough, Jodie. (24 March 1993). "Wooldridge would welcome Richardson as an opponent". [[The Canberra Times]].
- {{cite Au Parliament
- General Practice, Changing the Future Through Partnerships: Australian Government Publishing Service, Canberra, 1998
- (24 May 2001). "Interview with Dr Kerryn Phelps, AMA President". ABC 774 3LO, Melbourne.
- (2 February 2001). "Paying the Price". Australian Broadcasting Corporation.
- (10 February 2001). "Australian government loosens its grip on the pharmaceutical industry". The Lancet.
- (17 May 2002). "Wooldridge cleared on interest conflict". [[The Age]].
- (31 July 2003). "Wooldridge gets $382,500 payout from GPs' college". [[The Age]].
- (2006). "API Board of Directors". [[Australian Pharmaceutical Industries.
- (2009). "CSL Limited". CSL Limited.
- Rose, Danny. (1 October 2009). "Crackpots are against swine flu vaccine, says Michael Wooldridge". [[The Australian]].
- (2009). "CogState Board of Directors". CogState Ltd.
- "Prime Trust directors found to have breached duties".
- Wilkins, Georgia. (2 December 2014). "Former minister Michael Wooldridge cops ban over Prime Trust collapse". [[The Sydney Morning Herald]].
- "Group to probe wind farm illness". [[The Weekly Times]].
- Senate Community Affairs References Committee. (29 March 2011). "Reference: Social and economic impact of rural wind farms".
- (10 October 2011). "Australia". The Spec.
- "Senate: Community Affairs Committee: The Social and Economic Impact of Rural Wind Farms: Submissions Received".
- (1 March 2010). "Claims of wind farm illness".
- (24 July 2008). "Protecting the spa country – Tuki Retreat/Tuki Trout Farm Proponents". Spacountryguardians.org.au.
- "Surf Coast Shire – Home". Surfcoast.vic.gov.au.
- (15 May 2008). "Mt Pollock protesters feel ill wind after tower vandalism – Local News – Geelong, VIC, Australia". Geelongadvertiser.com.au.
- "Objectives". Waubra Foundation.
- Seccombe, Mike. (5 October 2012). "A Field Guide To The War On Wind Power (Part Two)".
- (24 June 2004). "Panel report: Bald Hills wind farm project".
This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.
Ask Mako anything about Michael Wooldridge (politician) — get instant answers, deeper analysis, and related topics.
Research with MakoFree with your Surf account
Create a free account to save articles, ask Mako questions, and organize your research.
Sign up freeThis content may have been generated or modified by AI. CloudSurf Software LLC is not responsible for the accuracy, completeness, or reliability of AI-generated content. Always verify important information from primary sources.
Report