Chansey_Paech

Chansey Paech

Chansey Paech

Australian politician


Chanston James "Chansey" Paech (/ˈænzi pk/, CHAN-zee PAYK; born 1987[1]) is an Australian politician. He is a Labor Party member of the Northern Territory Legislative Assembly since 2016, representing the electorate of Namatjira until 2020 and Gwoja thereafter. He is of Arrente, Arabana and Gurindji descent.[2]

Quick Facts The HonourableMLA, 20th Deputy Chief Minister of the Northern Territory ...

Early years and background

Paech was born in Alice Springs. His mother is of indigenous Arrernte, Arabana, and Gurindji descent. His father, who was born in South Australia, has family connections tracing back to the settling of the Adelaide Hills, namely the region of Hahndorf, by people of German descent.[citation needed]

He is the great-great grandson of Central Australian pioneer, Topsy Smith, and the great-great nephew of bushman Walter Smith.[3] Paech is the only openly gay male MP in the NT Legislative Assembly, and before entering politics, he was a prominent LGBT rights activist.[citation needed]

Paech was educated in Alice Springs, Northern Territory and participated in many youth programs including the inaugural National Indigenous Youth Parliament.[citation needed] He went on to study at Charles Darwin University in the fields of Environmental and land management, Conservation and Horticulture.[citation needed]

Paech was elected to the Alice Springs Town Council in 2012.[4]

Paech has condemned the Northern Territory Emergency Response (NTER) or commonly known as the Intervention and Stronger Futures[5] and has condemned race-based policy.

Territory Policies

Justice

Paech was sworn in as the Northern Territory Attorney General in May 2022 and committed to overhauling the Northern Territory's Justice and Correctional systems, in October 2022 Paech introduced a suite of laws raising the age of criminal responsibility and reforming adult mandatory sentencing[6]

Paech also introduced a suite of amendments to the Northern Territory's anti-discrimination laws[7] making the Northern Territory's anti-discrimination laws Nation leading at the time in terms of protections for vulnerable people and minority groups.

In February 2022, Paech, having responsibility for the Northern Territory's sacred sites legislation, tabled a decision in Northern Territory parliament to reject an application to expand the controversial McArthur River mine.[8]

Housing

In the Gunner Ministry Paech was sworn in as the Minister for Remote Housing, Homelands and Town Camps. He opposed the then Commonweath government the Morrison Government for failures to deliver remote housing on homelands and town camps[9] a position which was also supported by Selena Uibo, the succeeding Minister for Housing in the Northern Territory.

Politics

Paech was preselected as the Labor candidate for Namatjira for the 2016 Territory election. The seat's incumbent since 2005 (dating to when the seat was known as MacDonnell), independent Alison Anderson, was retiring after three terms. On paper, Paech faced daunting odds. The seat had a notional Country Liberal Party majority of 20.8 percent, and a redistribution had seemingly consolidated the CLP's hold on the seat by pushing it into Alice Springs.[10] However, Anderson, who had served under four banners during her tenure (Labor, CLP, independent, Palmer United and independent again) endorsed Paech as her successor; she is a longtime indigenous activist, and retained substantial goodwill in the area.[11] The ABC's Antony Green believed that Anderson's endorsement made Namatjira "a certain Labor gain."[12]

Paech won the seat resoundingly, taking 59 percent of the two-party vote on a swing of over 29 percent, the second-largest swing of the election—enough to revert Namatjira to its traditional status as a safe Labor seat. He was subsequently made Deputy Speaker and Chairman of Committees.[13]

Paech is the first openly gay indigenous MP in Australia.[14] He gave his maiden parliamentary speech on 19 October 2016, in which he said he entered the chamber "eternally proud of who I am and where I come from ... I am young, I am gay, I am black; a true-blue Territorian. I am a proud face of the diversity and future of the great Australian Labor party."[15] He added: "I look forward to the day when this country will recognise my rights as equal rights, when I too can marry in my country, on my country, as a recognised first Australian."[15][1]

In June 2020, Paech was elected Speaker of the Northern Territory Legislative Assembly, making him Australians first Aboriginal and openly gay speaker of an Australian Parliament replacing Kezia Purick who resigned after findings of corrupt conduct against her by the Northern Territory Independent Commissioner Against Corruption. He won the new seat of Gwoja at the 2020 Territory election.[16] He resigned as Speaker in September 2020 to join the Gunner Ministry as Minister for Local Government; Minister for Central Australia Economic Reconstruction; Minister for Remote Housing and Town Camps; Minister for Indigenous Essential Services; and Minister for Arts and Culture.

In May 2022, Paech was sworn in as the Northern Territory Attorney General; Leader of Government Business; Minister for Racing, Gaming and Licensing; Minister for Arts and Culture and Minister for Local Government[17] in the Fyles Ministry.

Paech is a member of the Labor Party Left faction.


References

  1. Winsor, Ben (19 October 2016). "Full Text: Chansey Paech's maiden speech to parliament". Special Broadcasting Service. Retrieved 6 May 2017.
  2. "WALKING THROUGH TIME: THE GHANS RETURN". Alice Springs News. 14 August 2002. Retrieved 3 January 2017.
  3. Brash, Stewart (31 March 2012). "Damien Ryan re-elected as Alice Springs Mayor". Australian Broadcasting Corporation. ABC Alice Springs. Retrieved 28 August 2016.
  4. Kurmelovs, Royce; Allam, Lorena (16 February 2022). "NT government rejects Glencore bid to build toxic dump near sacred site". The Guardian. ISSN 0261-3077. Retrieved 7 March 2023.
  5. "Electorate: Namatjira". ABC News. Retrieved 28 August 2016.
  6. Bardon, Jane (11 August 2016). "NT election: CLP facing uphill battle in bush electorates". Australian Broadcasting Corporation. Retrieved 12 August 2016.
  7. "List of Members" (PDF). Retrieved 18 March 2017.
  8. "Meet The First Gay Aboriginal Politician Elected To An Australian Parliament". Buzzfeed. 5 September 2016. Retrieved 5 September 2016.
  9. Davidson, Helen (19 October 2016). "'I am young, I am gay, I am black,' says Chansey Paech to NT parliament". Guardian Australia. Retrieved 20 October 2016.
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