The Shadow Ministry of Bob Hawke was the opposition Australian Labor Party shadow ministry of Australia from 8 February 1983 to 11 March 1983, opposing Malcolm Fraser's Coalition ministry.
The shadow cabinet is a group of senior Opposition spokespeople who form an alternative Cabinet to the government's, whose members shadow or mark each individual Minister or portfolio of the Government.
Bob Hawke became Leader of the Opposition upon his election as leader of the Australian Labor Party on 8 February 1983, and appointed a Shadow Cabinet. The Shadow Ministry never sat in Parliament, having spent the entirety of its short existence in the election campaign which Labor won.
Shadow Ministry
The following were members of the Shadow Cabinet:[1]
Shadow Minister | Portfolio |
---|---|
Bob Hawke MP |
|
The Hon. Lionel Bowen MP |
|
Senator John Button |
|
Senator Don Grimes |
|
Neal Blewett MP |
|
John Brown MP |
|
John Dawkins MP |
|
Senator Gareth Evans |
|
Senator Arthur Gietzelt |
|
The Hon. Bill Hayden MP |
|
Chris Hurford MP |
|
The Hon. Paul Keating MP |
|
John Kerin MP |
|
Barry Jones MP |
|
Peter Morris MP |
|
Senator Susan Ryan |
|
The Hon. Gordon Scholes MP |
|
The Hon. Tom Uren MP |
|
Senator Peter Walsh |
|
Stewart West MP |
|
Ralph Willis MP |
|
Mick Young MP |
|
See also
References
- ↑ "Opposition Executives and Shadow Ministries" (TXT). psephos.adam-carr.net. Retrieved December 23, 2023.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.