Kay_Elson

Kay Elson

Kay Elson

Australian politician


Kay Selma Elson (born 25 January 1947), Australian politician, was a Liberal Member of the Australian House of Representatives from March 1996 until her retirement in November 2007. Kay represented the Division of Forde, Queensland.[1] She was born in Brisbane, Queensland, and was a special events co-ordinator for a handicapped association,[2] a shop proprietor and a financial consultant before entering politics.[1] Elson is married to David, a beekeeper and bush poet.[3] Elson has eight children, 24 grandchildren and four great grandchildren.[4]

Quick Facts Member of the Australian Parliament for Forde, Preceded by ...

Elson had contested a total of four Queensland state elections prior to her candidacy for federal parliament.[5] She ran for Woodridge in 1983 as a Nationals candidate, Springwood in 1986 as an independent candidate, and Albert and Broadwater in 1989 and 1992 respectively as a Liberal Party candidate. She ran as "Elson, Selma Kay" for the 1983 election.[6]

Elson was preselected as the Liberal candidate in Forde for the 1996 election. The seat was originally a safe Labor seat, but a redistribution added some Liberal-friendly territory in the Scenic Rim, which all but erased Labor's majority. Elson defeated Labor incumbent Mary Crawford on a nine-percent swing, turning Forde into a safe Liberal seat in one stroke. Her victory was part of Labor's near-total collapse in Queensland; Labor was cut down to only two seats there.

In October 2006, Kay Elson announced that she would not be seeking a fifth term and retired at the 2007 Election. By this time, she had built up her majority to 12 percent. However, the seat was lost to Labor on a 14-point swing, making it one of the safest Coalition seats to be gained by Labor.


References

  1. Elson, Kay Selma (1947 - ), The Australian Women's Register, 22 April 2009.
  2. Farouque, Farah (12 October 2003). "The Pull of House and home". The Age. Retrieved 22 August 2015.
  3. Paul A. Pickering (March 1998). "The Class of 96: A Biographical Analysis of New Government Members of the Australian House of Representatives". Australian Journal of Politics & History. 44 (1): 95–112. doi:10.1111/1467-8497.00006. Retrieved 24 August 2022.
  4. "Parliamentary Papers Volume 3". Queensland Parliament Legislative Assembly. 1983. p. 71.
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