Jump to content

Ken Aldred

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Ken Aldred
Member of the Australian Parliament
for Henty
In office
13 December 1975 – 18 October 1980
Preceded byJoan Child
Succeeded byJoan Child
Member of the Australian Parliament
for Bruce
In office
28 May 1983 – 24 March 1990
Preceded byBilly Snedden
Succeeded byJulian Beale
Member of the Australian Parliament
for Deakin
In office
24 March 1990 – 29 January 1996
Preceded byJulian Beale
Succeeded byPhil Barresi
Personal details
Born
Kenneth James Aldred

(1945-08-01)1 August 1945
East Melbourne, Victoria, Australia
Died17 April 2016(2016-04-17) (aged 70)
Political partyLiberal Party of Australia

Kenneth James Aldred (1 August 1945 – 17 April 2016)[1] was an Australian politician who represented the Liberal Party in the Australian House of Representatives between 1975 and 1980 and again from 1983 to 1996.

Early life

[edit]

Aldred was born in East Melbourne, Victoria, on 1 August 1945. He was educated at Melbourne High School and Monash University, and held the degrees of Bachelor of Economics and Master of Administration from Monash University.

During 1970–71 he was Special Projects Officer in the Commonwealth Public Service Board in Melbourne. This was followed by two years in the period 1971–73, as Management Training Officer at the Administrative College of Papua New Guinea. Though principally based in Port Moresby, Aldred also had responsibility for running management courses in several of PNG's major regional centres.[citation needed]

In June 1973 Aldred returned to the Commonwealth Public Service Board in Melbourne as Industrial Information Officer. Later that year he was appointed Senior Industry Survey Officer in the Commonwealth Industries Assistance Commission, also in Melbourne. He remained there until elected to Federal Parliament in December 1975 as the Member for Henty.

Military service

[edit]

From 1965 to 1971, Aldred served in the Australian Army Reserve. His first four years were in the Melbourne University Regiment (MUR) and the last two years as a lieutenant and platoon commander in the newly formed Monash University Regiment (Mon UR). He was also Assistant Adjutant of Mon UR, and founded and edited the joint regimental publication, The Military Review. Aldred had a three-month attachment to the Australian Regular Army over the summer of 1968–69, as a sergeant instructor in 1 Recruit Training Battalion (1RTB) at Kapooka in New South Wales.[citation needed]

Political career

[edit]

Federal election

[edit]

Upon election as federal member for Henty in the Australian House of Representatives in the Liberal landslide of 13 December 1975, Aldred assumed a very active role in Coalition and Parliamentary Committees. He chaired the Government Members' Small Business Committee, working closely with the Industry Minister, Phillip Lynch, on small business policy formulation.

As Chairman of the Government Members' Worker Participation Committee, Aldred produced the first definitive set of proposals for a Coalition worker participation policy, to then prime minister, Malcolm Fraser. Many of the proposals were incorporated in a worker participation policy later announced by the productivity minister, Ian Macphee.

Expenditure Committee

[edit]

Aldred was an active member of the newly established Expenditure Committee of the House of Representatives and as Chairman of the Government Members' Trade Sub-Committee, worked closely with the Deputy Prime Minister and Trade Minister, Doug Anthony.

Manpower Development Executive

[edit]

Defeated in October 1980, by the later House Speaker, Joan Child, Ken Aldred returned to the training profession. In early 1981 he took up the position of Manpower Development Executive with the Victorian Dairy Processing Industry Training Committee (VDPITC), operating under the auspices of the Australian Dairy Cooperation (ADC). In this capacity he spent over two years setting up training courses and training manuals for Victoria's dairy industry factories. He spent a considerable amount of time visiting factories in the state's three dairying regions, namely Gippsland, the Western District and the Northern Region.[citation needed]

Ken Aldred left VDPITC on re-election to the federal parliament in May 1983. He re-entered the House of Representatives through the by-election in Bruce, which followed the resignation of House Speaker, Sir Billy Snedden, after the Coalition defeat in the 1983 federal election.

House of Representatives

[edit]

During his time as the MHR for Bruce, Aldred took a prominent role on defence and economic issues, as chair of the Opposition Defence Committee and the Opposition Treasury Committee.

In 1985, he was elected by the Liberal Party to represent Australia at the United Nations General Assembly in New York, as the Opposition Parliamentary Adviser to the Australian Mission. At the UN, he became involved in committee work on the international drug trade and on Antarctica.

Shortly afterwards in 1986–87 he was appointed Parliamentary Secretary to the then Leader of the Opposition, John Howard. Following an electoral re-distribution he was elected to represent Deakin in the 1990 federal election and remained there until the 1996 election, when he lost pre-selection to his successor, Phil Barresi.

Throughout his six years as member for Deakin, Aldred was a most active Liberal member on the Joint Parliamentary Committee of Public Accounts, spearheading the inquiries into business migration and the Australian Taxation Office. The Charter of Taxpayers' Rights and other reforms to Tax Office administration were largely attributed to him.

As a result of these inquiries, abuses of the Business Migration Programme were eliminated and significant reforms were made to Tax Office administration, including the introduction of the Charter of Taxpayers' Rights.[2][3]

At this time he was also Chairman of the Opposition Immigration and Ethnic Affairs Committee. During the 1980s, Aldred successfully advocated for the immigration to Australia of a large group of Jewish refuseniks from the Soviet Union, when they had been refused admission by the federal Labor government.

Controversy

[edit]

In November 1989, Aldred and Senator Jim Short alleged that Labor MP Lewis Kent was "an agent of a foreign power" and had ties to the UDBA, the Yugoslav secret police. Their allegations were based on a statutory declaration from a member of Melbourne's Yugoslav community. Kent vigorously denied their claims, describing them as a smear campaign.[4] The House of Representatives later voted on party lines to suspend Aldred for two days, following a report from the privileges committee.[5]

Aldred was disendorsed by the Liberal Party for Deakin in 1995 for the 1996 federal election and subsequently used parliamentary privilege to make allegations of involvement in espionage and drug trafficking against a prominent Jewish lawyer and a senior foreign affairs official,[6] using documents that were later found to be forged,[7] which had been supplied to him by LaRouche movement front organisation the Citizens Electoral Council.[8][9][10] He also alleged that the Department of Foreign Affairs had twenty child sexual abusers employed in senior positions, and named senior diplomat John Holloway, who was charged and later acquitted.[11]

Publications

[edit]

Aldred was a regular writer on policy issues for magazines and newspapers. Additionally he was co-editor and contributor to three books.

The first, The Heart of Liberalism, was produced in 1994 with fellow Liberal MPs Kevin Andrews and Paul Filing. It presented a pragmatic and centrist philosophy and set of policies for the Liberal Party.[12]

After politics

[edit]

After leaving federal parliament in 1996, Aldred was President and later Chairman of the Society of Australian Industry and Employment (SAIE) 2001–08, during which he devoted much time and energy to promoting the interests of Australian industry. This included editing and contributing to two books on industry policy, Rekindling the Flame in 2000, and Getting on Track in 2004.[13][14]

From December 1996 until his death, Aldred was the proprietor of one of Australia's major equestrian centres, the Victorian Equestrian Centre (VEC) in Upper Beaconsfield. The VEC offers children's riding clubs, school holiday camps, riding lessons, trail rides, specialised training programs and agistment. The VEC also founded the concept of Interschool Equestrian Challenges, with four of them being run each year.[15]

Aldred died unexpectedly on 17 April 2016 and is survived by his four children.[16]

One of these four children, Mary was preselected as the Liberal candidate for the seat of Monash in 2023 for the election that is due in 2025.

The preselection saw Mary Aldred defeat sitting MP Russell Broadbent who was a parliamentary colleague of her late father. [17]

Parliament of Australia
Preceded by Member for Henty
1975–1980
Succeeded by
Preceded by Member for Bruce
1983–1990
Succeeded by
Preceded by Member for Deakin
1990–1996
Succeeded by

References

[edit]
  1. ^ Ken's passion for life
  2. ^ Public Accounts Committee Report 310, Business Migration Programme. Canberra: Australian Government Publishing Service. 1991.
  3. ^ Public Accounts Committee Report 326, An Assessment of Tax. Canberra: Australian Government Publishing Service. 1993.
  4. ^ "Labor MP 'agent of foreign power'". The Canberra Times. 24 November 1989.
  5. ^ "Aldred banned for two days". The Canberra Times. 22 December 1989.
  6. ^ "APPROPRIATION BILL (No. 1) 1995-96: Second Reading". Hansard. 5 June 1995. Archived from the original on 22 June 2011. Retrieved 19 April 2018.
  7. ^ "Aldred's preselection bid fails". ABC. 22 March 2007.
  8. ^ "Liberals distance themselves from controversial candidate (March 19, 2007)". Archived from the original on 3 October 2007. Retrieved 19 April 2018.
  9. ^ "Anti-Defamation Commission: "The LaRouche Cult: The Citizens Electoral Council (PDF)" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 14 May 2008. Retrieved 19 April 2018.
  10. ^ Grattan, Michelle (20 March 2007). "Senior Libs move on Aldred approval". The Age. Melbourne.
  11. ^ "No more chances for Ken Aldred". The Age. Melbourne. 22 March 2007.
  12. ^ editors, Ken Aldred, Kevin Andrews, Paul Filing (1994). The heart of liberalism. Mitcham, Vic.: Albury Papers. ISBN 0-646-21290-7. {{cite book}}: |last1= has generic name (help)CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  13. ^ al., Rupert Hamer ... et (2000). Rekindling the flame : a blueprint for Australia. [Carnegie, Vic.]: Society for Australian Industry and Employment. ISBN 0-9578498-0-X.
  14. ^ al., Ken Aldred ... et (2004). Getting on track : a business plan for Australia. [Upper Beaconsfield, Vic.]: Society for Australian Industry and Employment Inc. ISBN 0-646-43500-0.
  15. ^ "Victorian Equestrian Centre website". The Victorian Equestrian Centre.
  16. ^ Hansard, 19 April 2016, Condolence Motion: Ken Aldred. Retrieved 20 April 2016
  17. ^ "Liberals choose Aldred over Broadbent in 'generational change' for Monash". 12 November 2023.

Further reading

[edit]