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Rachel Sanderson

Australian politician


Summary

Australian politician

FieldValue
honorific-prefixThe Honourable
nameRachel Sanderson
imageRachel Sanderson, South Australia, 2018.jpg
constituency_AM1Adelaide
assembly1South Australian House of
term_start120 March 2010
term_end119 March 2022
predecessor1Jane Lomax-Smith
successor1Lucy Hood
officeMinister for Child Protection
premierSteven Marshall
predecessorJohn Rau (as Minister for Child Protection Reform)
successorKatrine Hildyard
term_start
term_end
nationalityAustralian
partyLiberal Party of Australia (SA)
professionFinancial manager; Politician
educationUniversity of South Australia
websiterachelsanderson.com.au

| honorific-prefix = The Honourable Rachel Sanderson is an Australian politician who represented the seat of Adelaide in the South Australian House of Assembly for the South Australian Division of the Liberal Party of Australia from the 2010 election to the 2022 election. Sanderson served as the minister for Child Protection in the Marshall Ministry.

Background and early career

Sanderson's family moved from Melbourne to Adelaide in 1983, settling in Prospect, an inner northern suburb of Adelaide. Sanderson attended St Peter's Collegiate Girls' School.

Sanderson graduated from the University of South Australia with a Bachelor of Arts in Accountancy. She worked for a chartered accountant, a finishing school and then a modelling agency as a financial manager. In 1994 Sanderson established a modelling agency and training school, Rachel's Model Management.

Sanderson sold her management agency in April 2013, citing her full-time occupation as being a member of parliament.

Political career

Sanderson was elected to the South Australian House of Assembly seat of Adelaide at the 2010 state election, receiving a 14.5-point two-party swing on a margin of 4.2 points against the Labor incumbent, Jane Lomax-Smith. At the 2014 state election she suffered a 1.8-point two-party swing against her finishing with a reduced margin of 2.4 points against the Labor candidate, David O'Loughlin.

2016 redistribution campaign

Upon the release of the 2016 draft electoral redistribution, Sanderson organised the mass distribution of a pro forma document in the two inner metropolitan suburbs of Walkerville and Gilberton, which aimed for residents to use the pro forma document to submit their objection to the commission in support of Sanderson's campaign to keep the two suburbs in her seat of Adelaide, which in the draft would have been transferred to neighbouring Torrens. Sanderson's position however was at odds with her own party's submission which agreed with the commission that Walkerville should be transferred to Torrens. Under the commission's draft proposal, the Liberal margin in Adelaide would have been reduced from 2.4 percent to 0.6 percent but would have also resulted in the Labor margin in Torrens reduced from 3.5 percent to 1.1 percent. Of a record 130 total submissions received in response to the draft redistribution, about 100 (over three-quarters of all submissions) were from Walkerville and Gilberton. As a result, the commission reversed the draft decision in the final publication. The 2016 electoral redistribution added the rest of Collinswood to the seat and moved the seat's northern boundary from Regency Road to several blocks south of Regency Road, losing a significant amount of northern Prospect. This increased the Liberal margin from 2.4 percent to an estimated 3.0 percent.

2018 election

Despite suffering a further −2.0 percent two-party swing, Sanderson narrowly held onto Adelaide at the 2018 election on a marginal 51.0 percent two-party vote. With the Liberals winning government after 16 years in opposition, Sanderson sat in the Liberals' second most marginal seat.

Sanderson was appointed as Minister for Child Protection on 22 March 2018.

2022 election

Sanderson was defeated at the 2022 election by Labor's Lucy Hood.

References

References

  1. (2 June 2002). "Retention of the Title Honourable". South Australian Government Gazette.
  2. {{Cite SA-parl
  3. "About Rachel". Rachel Sanderson.
  4. (22 April 2013). "Adelaide state Liberal MP Rachel Sanderson sells her modelling agency". City Messenger.
  5. [http://www.abc.net.au/elections/sa/2010/guide/adel.htm Adelaide - 2010 SA election results: ABC]
  6. [http://www.abc.net.au/news/sa-election-2014/guide/adel/ Adelaide - 2014 SA election results: ABC]
  7. (22 September 2016). "Adelaide residents compared to 'Hyacinth Bucket' for lashing out at proposed electoral shift". [[ABC News (Australia).
  8. (22 September 2016). "Patrician burghers of Adelaide lament: 'Won't someone think of the rotary clubs?'". InDaily.
  9. (28 September 2016). "Libs' last-ditch bid for "electoral fairness"". InDaily.
  10. (22 September 2016). "MPs make submissions into South Australian boundary changes". The Advertiser.
  11. (15 August 2016). "Draft Report". Electoral Districts Boundaries Commission.
  12. "Detail and download of all 130 submissions submitted". Electoral Districts Boundaries Commission.
  13. (8 December 2016). "Final Report". Electoral Districts Boundaries Commission.
  14. (22 March 2018). "District Results for Adelaide". Electoral Commission SA.
  15. [http://www.abc.net.au/news/elections/sa-election-2018/guide/adel/ Adelaide, 2018 SA election: Antony Green ABC]
  16. MacLennan, Leah. (22 March 2018). "SA election: Who's who in the new South Australian Liberal Government?".
  17. "The South Australian Government Gazette, 22 March 2018, No. 20, Supplementary Gazette".
  18. "Adelaide (Key Seat)".
Wikipedia Source

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.

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