Gordon Ramsay (politician)

Gordon Ramsay (born 1964) is a Member of the Legislative Assembly of the Australian Capital Territory, representing the Ginninderra electorate. He was elected to be a Minister in the Barr government.[1]

Gordon Ramsay

Gordon Ramsay, October 2016
Member of the Australian Capital Territory Legislative Assembly
for Ginninderra
Assumed office
15 October 2016
Attorney-General
Assumed office
31 October 2016
LeaderAndrew Barr
Preceded bySimon Corbell
Personal details
NationalityAustralian
Political partyLabor Party
Spouse(s)Lyndelle Ramsay
OccupationUniting Church minister
ProfessionSolicitor

Ramsay has also been a minister of the Uniting Church in Australia, and earlier a lawyer in New South Wales.

Early life

Ramsay was raised in the southern Sydney suburb of Banksia, and attended primary schools at Rockdale and Hurstville before Sydney Boys' High School. He studied law at the University of Sydney graduating with a degree of Bachelor of Arts LLB (Hons), and then was admitted as a solicitor.

Uniting Church

Ramsay felt called to Christian ministry, and undertook the selection processes of the Uniting Church before being accepted for training at the Uniting Church Centre for Ministry in Sydney. He first served at Kingsgrove/Bardwell Park UCA.

1997–2016

From 1997–2016, he was the Executive Minister at Kippax Uniting Church in the north-western suburbs of Canberra, Australian Capital Territory. This untypically long period of ministry in one church was characterised by his evolution as a spokesperson and organiser for social justice. The major speech at his end-of-ministry ceremony on 3 April 2016 was given by Lin Hatfield Dodds.[2] He technically remains a Minister of the UCA, in a similar way that Hon. Brian Howe remained a UCA Minister while serving in the Parliament of Australia.

During this period, he worked in the ACT Anti Poverty Week, ACT Council of Social Services, and was a member of the ACT Community Inclusion Board and a Community Inclusion Advocate. He was a Community Champion for the 2020 Time To Talk movement, and a member of the ACT Better Services Taskforce. In 2012, Ramsay led the ACT Targeted Assistance Strategy.

He was recognised in 2014 as a finalist in the Act Local Hero category of the Australian of the Year awards.

He served on the Board of UnitingCare NSW-ACT (later "Uniting") from 2011, and chaired the Board from 2014–2016.

Politician

2016 election

Gordon Ramsay's political signs for 2016

Ramsay announced his candidacy for the Labor Party in the 2016 Australian Capital Territory general election, for the Ginninderra electorate. His election material highlighted Our Gordon Ramsay and used visual metaphors from the other (chef) Gordon Ramsay.

He was initially indicated to be the third Labor candidate in the five member electorate.[3][4] Ramsay finished the count 722 votes ahead of Greens candidate Indra Esguerra, and was thus a recipient of a distribution from her in the last round.[5]

Ministry

At the first Labor Caucus meeting, on 24 October 2016, Ramsay was elected to the new seven-member Cabinet.[1]

Ramsay's ministerial responsibilities were announced on the first sitting day of the Assembly, 31 October 2016, as:

  • Attorney General, and
  • Minister for Regulatory Services (including the racing and gaming industries.)[6]

Current (2020):

  • Attorney-General (October 2016–present)
  • Minister for the Arts, Creative Industries and Cultural Events (October 2016–present)
  • Minister for Building Quality Improvement (August 2018–present)
  • Minister for Business and Regulatory Services (October 2016–present)
  • Minister for Seniors and Veterans (October 2016–present)

Previous

  • Minister for Government Services and Procurement (July 2019–August 2019)

References

  1. New ACT MLAs Rachel Stephen-Smith and Gordon Ramsey leapfrog into Cabinet, ABC News Online, 24 October 2016
  2. Gordon’s Farewell, Kippax Uniting Church, 4 April 2016, accessed 21 October 2016
  3. ACT election 2016: who has been elected to the Legislative Assembly?, Canberra Times, 16 October 2016, accessed 21 October 2016
  4. 2016 ACT Election – Elected Members by Interim Preference Distribution, Antony Green, ABC News Online, 18 October 2016, accessed 21 October 2016
  5. ACT election 2016: full list of elected MLAs released, Matthew Raggatt, Canberra Times, 22 October 2016, accessed 24 October 2016
  6. ACT new Labor ministry revealed as Andrew Barr formally re-elected as Chief Minister, ABC News Online, 31 October 2016
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