HOME

TheInfoList



OR:

There have been 121 women in the
Australian Senate The Senate is the upper house of the Bicameralism, bicameral Parliament of Australia, the lower house being the House of Representatives (Australia), House of Representatives. The composition and powers of the Senate are established in Chapter ...
since the establishment of the Parliament of Australia. Women have had the right to stand for federal parliament since 1902, and there were three female candidates for the Senate at the 1903 federal election ( Vida Goldstein, Nellie Martel, and
Mary Moore-Bentley :For the Arkansas politician, see '' Mary Bentley.'' Mary Ann Moore-Bentley, also known as Mary Ling (6 January 1865 – 1 September 1953), was an Australian writer and parliamentary candidate. Born in Braidwood to English-born Methodists ...
). However, it was not until
Dorothy Tangney Dame Dorothy Margaret Tangney DBE (13 March 19073 June 1985) was an Australian politician. She was a member of the Australian Labor Party (ALP) and served as a Senator for Western Australia from 1943 to 1968. She was the first woman elected to ...
's victory at the 1943 federal election that a woman was elected. Since then, all states and territories have had multiple female senators – in chronological order: Western Australia (1943), Queensland (1947), Victoria (1950), South Australia (1955), Tasmania (1975), the Australian Capital Territory (1975), New South Wales (1987), and the Northern Territory (1998).


History

The passage of the '' Commonwealth Franchise Act'' allowed women to both vote and stand for election to the Parliament of Australia.Women in South and Western Australia voted in the 1901 election.
Indigenous Australian women did not achieve federal franchise in all jurisdictions until 1962, and were not required by law to enrol to vote until 1983. Three women stood unsuccessfully as independents or as representatives of minor parties for election to the Senate for the 1903 election. Nellie Martel and Mary Ann Moore-Bentley of New South Wales ran, each earning around 18,000 votes, with the leading man winning roughly 190,000 votes. Vida Goldstein, from Victoria, ran and gained 51,497 votes, which was roughly half the votes the winning man gained. She then ran unsuccessfully again in 1910 and 1917 after a short stint attempting to breakthrough into the House of Representatives. In 1919, Mary McMahon of NSW ran unsuccessfully, and was not followed by another woman candidate until 1934 saw Lillie Beirne (NSW) and Joanna Helbach (QLD) run. Following this,
Jeanne Young Sarah Jane Young (; known as Jeanne Forster Young; 1 July 1866 – 11 April 1955) was an Australian political reformer. Born at Unley in Adelaide to smith John Forster and Sarah Jane, ''née'' Jarvis, she received a private education before be ...
of Western Australia ran in 1937 and
Adela Walsh Adela Constantia Mary Walsh ( Pankhurst; 19 June 1885 – 23 May 1961) was a British born suffragette who worked as a political organiser for the WSPU in Scotland. In 1914 she moved to Australia where she continued her activism and was co-foun ...
(NSW) and
Dorothy Tangney Dame Dorothy Margaret Tangney DBE (13 March 19073 June 1985) was an Australian politician. She was a member of the Australian Labor Party (ALP) and served as a Senator for Western Australia from 1943 to 1968. She was the first woman elected to ...
(WA) ran in 1940. However, women were not successful in entering federal politics until World War II. The major parties did not endorse any female candidates for the Senate before the War. The first woman to be elected to the Senate was representative
Dorothy Tangney Dame Dorothy Margaret Tangney DBE (13 March 19073 June 1985) was an Australian politician. She was a member of the Australian Labor Party (ALP) and served as a Senator for Western Australia from 1943 to 1968. She was the first woman elected to ...
in 1943; she represented Western Australia. Following Tangney's entry into politics, the Senate has continuously had women members. However, despite the success, the number of women running continued to fluctuate drastically. Prior to 1981, the proportion of women running as candidates peaked at 20% in 1977 but had a low of only 1.3% in 1953. Between the years 1943 and 1969, there were only five elections of women and Enid Lyons accounted for three of these in the House of Representatives. Despite this, 41 women were elected into the Senate between 1943 and 1980. The proportion of women in the Senate can be seen over a long time period to have drastically grown, with the 1948 Senate being composed of 5.6% women, 14.1% in 1980, 23.7% in 1990, 28.9% in 2002, and 53% in 2021. The second woman elected to the Senate,
Annabelle Rankin Dame Annabelle Jane Mary Rankin DBE (28 July 190830 August 1986) was an Australian politician and diplomat. She was the first woman from Queensland elected to parliament, the first woman federal departmental minister, and the first Australian ...
, also achieved a number of firsts for women: she was the first female
Whip A whip is a tool or weapon designed to strike humans or other animals to exert control through pain compliance or fear of pain. They can also be used without inflicting pain, for audiovisual cues, such as in equestrianism. They are generally e ...
, and she was the first woman with a federal portfolio when she became Minister for Housing in 1966. In 1975, Margaret Guilfoyle became the first female cabinet minister with a portfolio. In 1996 Margaret Reid was the first woman elected as President of the Senate. Women in the Senate have made significant changes to Australian law which have benefited women. For example, a private member's bill written by Senator Susan Ryan was crucial to the development of the ''Sex Discrimination Act 1984'', the ''Affirmative Action (Equal Employment Opportunity for Women) Act 1986'', the ''Public Service Reform Act 1984'' and the ''Equal Employment Opportunity (Commonwealth Authorities) Act 1987''. With the appointment of
Sarah Henderson Sarah Moya Henderson (born 4 April 1964)HENDERSON, Sarah (1964–)
to the Senate on 11 September 2019, the number of women in the chamber was equal to the number of men for the first time in history. With the resignation of Richard Di Natale and the appointment of Lidia Thorpe on 4 September 2020, the number of women (39) exceeded the number of men (37) for the first time.


List of women in the Australian Senate

Names in bold type indicate Ministers and Parliamentary Secretaries. Names in ''italics'' indicate appointments made under section 15 of the Constitution, or through disqualification. Names marked with an asterisk (*) also served in the House of Representatives. Where no closing date is shown, the Senator's term of service is unexpired.


Timeline

ImageSize = width:1100 height:auto barincrement:12 PlotArea = top:10 bottom:80 right:200 left:20 AlignBars = early DateFormat = yyyy Period = from:1940 till:2025 TimeAxis = orientation:horizontal ScaleMajor = unit:year increment:5 start:1940 Colors = id:LP value:blue legend: Liberal Party of Australia id:AL value:red legend: Australian Labor Party id:NP value:teal legend: National (Country) Party of Australia id:AD value:orange legend: Australian Democrats id:ND value:yelloworange legend: Nuclear Disarmament Party id:AG value:brightgreen legend: Australian Greens/Greens WA id:ID value:gray(0.6) legend: Independent Legend = columns:4 left:150 top:50 columnwidth:200 BarData = barset:Senators bar:Robertson bar:Wedgwood bar:Buttfield barset:Senators2 bar:Haines barset:Senators3 bar:Vallentine barset:Senators4 bar:Powell bar:West barset:Senators5 bar:Lees barset:Senators6 bar:Collins barset:Senators7 bar:Pratt barset:Senators8 bar:Waters barset:Senators9 bar:Lambie barset:Senators10 bar:Gallagher barset:Senators11 bar:Gichuhi barset:Senators12 PlotData= width:5 align:left fontsize:S shift:(5,-4) anchor:till barset:Senators from:1943 till:1968 color:AL text:"
Dorothy Tangney Dame Dorothy Margaret Tangney DBE (13 March 19073 June 1985) was an Australian politician. She was a member of the Australian Labor Party (ALP) and served as a Senator for Western Australia from 1943 to 1968. She was the first woman elected to ...
(1943–1968)" from:1947 till:1971 color:LP text:"
Annabelle Rankin Dame Annabelle Jane Mary Rankin DBE (28 July 190830 August 1986) was an Australian politician and diplomat. She was the first woman from Queensland elected to parliament, the first woman federal departmental minister, and the first Australian ...
(1947–1971)" bar:Robertson from:1950 till:1955 color:LP text:" from:1955 till:1962 color:NP text:" Agnes Robertson (1950–1962)" bar:Wedgwood from:1950 till:1971 color:LP text:" Ivy Wedgwood (1950–1971)" bar:Buttfield from:1955 till:1965 color:LP text: from:1968 till:1974 color:LP text:" Nancy Buttfield (1955–1965, 1968–1974)" barset:Senators2 from:1962 till:1968 color:LP text:" Marie Breen (1962–1968)" from:1971 till:1987 color:LP text:" Margaret Guilfoyle (1971–1987)" from:1974 till:1987 color:AL text:"
Ruth Coleman Ruth Nancy Coleman (; 27 September 1931 – 27 March 2008) was an Australian politician. She was a member of the Australian Labor Party (ALP) and served as a Senator for Western Australia from 1974 to 1987. She was prominent in the anti-nuclea ...
(1974–1987)" from:1974 till:1981 color:AL text:"
Jean Melzer Jean Isabel Melzer (7 February 1926 – 18 June 2013) was an Australian Australian Senate, Senator representing the Australian Labor Party and the state of Victoria (Australia), Victoria. She was elected at the 1974 Australian federal electio ...
(1974–1981) from:1974 till:1984 color:LP text:" Kathy Sullivan (1974–1984)" from:1975 till:1988 color:AL text:" Susan Ryan (1975–1988)" from:1975 till:1993 color:LP text:"
Shirley Walters Mary Shirley Walters (née Harrison; 31 August 1925 – 18 June 2017) was an Australian politician who served as a Senator for Tasmania from 1975 to 1993, representing the Liberal Party. She was the first woman to represent Tasmania in the Senat ...
(1975–1993)" bar:Haines from:1977 till:1978 color:AD text: from:1981 till:1990 color:AD text:" Janine Haines (1977–1978, 1981–1990)" barset:Senators3 from:1980 till:1985 color:AL text:" Jean Hearn (1980–1985)" from:1981 till:1993 color:NP text:"
Flo Bjelke-Petersen Florence Isabel Bjelke-Petersen (née Gilmour; 11 August 1920 – 20 December 2017) was an Australian politician and writer. She was a member of the Australian Senate from 1981 to 1993, and was the wife of the longest-serving Premier of Queens ...
(1981–1993)" from:1981 till:2003 color:LP text:" Margaret Reid (1981–2003)" from:1981 till:1993 color:AL text:"
Patricia Giles Patricia Jessie Giles (; 16 November 1928 – 9 August 2017) was a women's activist and Australian Senator. She was the President of the International Alliance of Women for three terms, the last ending in 2004. Life A qualified nurse, she fou ...
(1981–1993)" from:1983 till:2002 color:AL text:" Rosemary Crowley (1983–2002)" from:1983 till:1999 color:AL text:"
Margaret Reynolds Margaret Reynolds (; born 19 July 1941) served as an Australian Labor Party Senator for Queensland from 1983 to 1999. Reynolds had two ministerial appointments during her time in the Senate, serving as Minister for Local Government from Sep ...
(1983–1999)" from:1983 till:1995 color:AL text:"
Olive Zakharov Alice Olive Zakharov (19 March 1929 – 6 March 1995) was an Australian politician. Zakharov was elected as an Australian Labor Party member of the Australian Senate in 1983. Former Senator Graham Richardson, a leader of the party's right fac ...
(1983–1995)" from:1984 till:2005 color:LP text:"
Susan Knowles Susan Christine Knowles (born 10 April 1951) is a former Australian politician who served as a Senator for Western Australia from 1984 to 2005, representing the Liberal Party. She briefly served as a shadow minister under John Hewson from 19 ...
(1984–2005)" from:1984 till:2007 color:LP text:" Amanda Vanstone (1984–2007)" bar:Vallentine from:1985 till:1986 color:ND text:" from:1986 till:1990 color:ID text:" from:1990 till:1992 color:AG text:"
Jo Vallentine Josephine Vallentine (born 30 May 1946) is an Australian peace activist and politician, a former Australian Senate, senator for Western Australia. She entered the Senate on 1 July 1985 after election as a member of the Nuclear Disarmament Party ...
(1985–1992)" barset:Senators4 from:1986 till:2002 color:LP text:" Jocelyn Newman (1986–2002)" bar:Powell from:1986 till:1992 color:AD text:" from:1992 till:1993 color:ID text:"
Janet Powell Janet Frances Powell AM (née McDonald, 29 September 194230 September 2013) was an Australian politician. A native of Nhill, Victoria, Powell was educated at Ballarat Grammar School and Nhill High School. She graduated from the University o ...
(1986–1993)" bar:West from:1987 till:1987 color:AL text: from:1990 till:2002 color:AL text:" Sue West (1987, 1990–2002)" barset:Senators5 from:1987 till:1994 color:LP text:"
Bronwyn Bishop Bronwyn Kathleen Bishop (née Setright; born 19 October 1942) is an Australian former politician. She was a member of federal parliament for almost 30 years, the longest period of service by a woman. A member of the Liberal Party, she was a mi ...
(1987–1994)" from:1987 till:1990 color:AD text:" Jean Jenkins (1987–1990)" from:1987 till:2008 color:LP text:"
Kay Patterson Kay Christine Lesley Patterson (born 21 November 1944) is a former Australian politician. She was a Liberal member of the Australian Senate from 1987 to 2008, representing the state of Victoria. Background and education Patterson was born in ...
(1987–2008)" from:1988 till:1990 color:ID text:"
Irina Dunn Irina Patsi Dunn (born 17 March 1948) is an Australian writer, social activist and filmmaker, who served in the Australian Senate between 1988 and 1990. Born in Shanghai, Dunn grew up in Australia and studied at the University of Sydney. In 19 ...
(1988–1990)" bar:Lees from:1990 till:2002 color:AD text: from:2002 till:2005 color:ID text:" Meg Lees (1990–2005)" barset:Senators6 from:1990 till:2002 color:AD text:"
Vicki Bourne Vicki Worrall Bourne (born 22 October 1954) is a former Australian Democrats Senator for New South Wales from 1990 to 2002. Bourne was born in Sydney; she attended the selective High School Fort Street, and then UNSW where she obtained a BSc ...
(1990–2002)" from:1990 till:1997 color:AD text:" Cheryl Kernot (1990–1997)" from:1991 till:1993 color:AD text:"
Karin Sowada Karin Nicole Sowada (born 1 November 1961) is an Australian archaeologist and former politician. She served two years as an Australian Democrats senator for New South Wales between 1991 and 1993. In 1998, she was a republican delegate to the Co ...
(1991–1993)" from:1992 till:1996 color:AG text:"
Christabel Chamarette Christabel Marguerite Alain Chamarette, sometimes Christabel Bridge (born 1 May 1948) was a Greens Senator for Western Australia from 1992 to 1996. Personal life Born in Hyderabad, India in 1948, Chamarette is of Anglo-Indian and French Huguen ...
(1992–1996)" from:1993 till:1999 color:AG text:" Dee Margetts (1993–1999)" from:1993 till:2011 color:LP text:"
Judith Troeth Judith Mary Troeth AM (born 3 August 1940) is an Australian former politician who served as a Liberal member of the Australian Senate from 1993 to 2011, representing the state of Victoria. She was born in Melbourne, Victoria, and was educated ...
(1993–2011)" from:1993 till:2005 color:AL text:" Kay Denman (1993–2005)" from:1994 till:1998 color:AL text:" Belinda Neal (1994–1998)" bar:Collins from:1995 till:2005 color:AL text: from:2008 till:2019 color:AL text:" Jacinta Collins (1995–2005, 2008–2019)" barset:Senators7 from:1995 till:2008 color:AD text:"
Natasha Stott Despoja Natasha Jessica Stott Despoja AO (born 9 September 1969) is an Australian politician, diplomat, advocate and author. She is the founding Chair of the Board of Our Watch, the national foundation to prevent violence against women and their childr ...
(1995–2008)" from:1996 till:2015 color:AL text:" Kate Lundy (1996–2015)" from:1996 till:2005 color:AL text:"
Sue Mackay Sue Mary Mackay (born 14 April 1960) is a former Australian politician who served as a Senator for Tasmania from 1996 to 2005, representing the Australian Labor Party (ALP). She was a shadow minister under Kim Beazley (1998–2001) and an oppos ...
(1996–2005)" from:1996 till:2008 color:AD text:" Lyn Allison (1996–2008)" from:1996 till:2011 color:LP text:" Helen Coonan (1996–2011)" from:1996 till:2007 color:LP text:" Jeannie Ferris (1996–2007)" from:1996 till:2002 color:AL text:"
Brenda Gibbs Brenda Gibbs (; born 3 September 1947) is an Australian politician. Gibbs was elected to the Australian Senate for Queensland in 1996, representing the Australian Labor Party. Her first term began on 1 July 1996, she was not re-elected at the 20 ...
(1996–2002)" from:1997 till:2023 color:LP text:" Marise Payne (1997–present)" from:1997 till:1999 color:LP text:" Karen Synon (1997–1999)" from:1998 till:2013 color:AL text:"
Trish Crossin Patricia Margaret Crossin (born 21 March 1956) is a former Australian politician, who served as a Senator for the Northern Territory from June 1998 to September 2013, representing the Australian Labor Party. Crossin was born in Melbourne and w ...
(1998–2013)" from:1999 till:2016 color:AL text:" Jan McLucas (1999–2016)" barset:skip


Proportion of women in the Senate

Numbers and proportions are as they were directly after the beginning of Senate terms and do not take into account deaths, resignations, appointments, defections or other changes in membership. As senators typically serve six-year terms, in the absence of a double dissolution, the numbers of female senators overlap two "terms". State-based Coalition parties that caucus with one of the major parties ( Liberal National Party, Country Liberal Party) have been included in the Liberals' or Nationals' totals.


See also

* Women and government in Australia *
Women in the Australian House of Representatives There have been 153 women in the Australian House of Representatives since the establishment of the Parliament of Australia. Women have had the right to both vote and sit in parliament since 1902. The first woman to run for the House of Representa ...


Notes


References

* * {{Women in national government Senators Women, Senate * Women