Kay Brownbill

Kay Brownbill
OBE
Member of the Australian Parliament
for Kingston
In office
26 November 1966  25 October 1969
Preceded by Pat Galvin
Succeeded by Richard Gun
Personal details
Born (1914-07-21)21 July 1914
Adelaide, South Australia
Died 3 February 2002(2002-02-03) (aged 87)
Adelaide, South Australia
Nationality Australian
Political party Liberal Party of Australia
Occupation Journalist, broadcaster

Kay Cathrine Millin Brownbill OBE (21 July 1914 3 February 2002) was an Australian politician. Born in Adelaide, she was educated at state schools before become a journalist, playwright, broadcaster and public relations officer. In 1966, she was elected to the Australian House of Representatives as a member of the Liberal Party of Australia, defeating Labor MP Pat Galvin for the seat of Kingston.

She was the first woman elected to the House since 1949, the first not preceded by her husband, and the third woman elected to Australia's lower house (the others being Enid Lyons and Doris Blackburn). She had lost to Galvin in a previous bid for the seat in 1963, but defeated Galvin on her second attempt as part of the massive Liberal landslide of that year on a swing of almost 13 per cent, enough to turn Kingston into a safe Liberal seat on paper. She was defeated in 1969 on an even larger swing—16.5 per cent—by Labor's Richard Gun, and left politics. Brownbill died in 2002.[1]

References

  1. Carr, Adam (2008). "Australian Election Archive". Psephos, Adam Carr's Election Archive. Archived from the original on 20 July 2007. Retrieved 2008-11-07.
Parliament of Australia
Preceded by
Pat Galvin
Member for Kingston
19661969
Succeeded by
Richard Gun


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