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Rees ministry
91st New South Wales government, led by Nathan Rees From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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The Rees ministry was the 91st ministry of the Government of New South Wales, and was led by the 41st Premier Nathan Rees.
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The Rees Labor ministry was formed following the resignation of Premier Morris Iemma on 5 September 2008 and the unanimous election of Rees as Leader of the Labor caucus and Carmel Tebbutt as Deputy Leader.[1]
On 5 September Rees and Tebbutt were sworn as Premier and Deputy Premier respectively by the Governor of New South Wales Professor Marie Bashir AC. The rest of the ministry was sworn in on 8 September 2008 at Government House by the Lieutenant Governor, James Spigelman AC.[2]
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Composition of ministry
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This ministry was announced on 8 September 2008. Just three days later Matt Brown resigned, causing a minor reshuffle.[3][a] Tony Stewart was dismissed on 11 November 2008.[b] There was a minor rearrangement in January 2009.[c][d][e] John Della Bosca resigned from the ministry on 31 August 2009,[f] prompting a reshuffle in which Rees punished those who had plotted against him as leader.[7][g][h][i][j][k][l][m] [n] In November 2009 the Labor state conference gave Rees the power to choose his own cabinet and he responded by sacking Joe Tripodi and Ian Macdonald.[8][o][p] 17 days later a Labor caucus revolt saw Kristina Keneally succeeded Rees as Premier.[9][10][11]
Ministers are members of the Legislative Assembly unless otherwise noted.
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See also
Notes
- Matt Brown resigned on 11 September 2008.[3] He was replaced as Minister for Police by Tony Kelly and by David Campbell as Minister for the Illawarra. Kelly's portfolio of Industrial Relations was transferred to John Hatzistergos.
- Tony Stewart was stood aside on 4 November 2008 following allegations that Stewart had verbally and physically harassed a staff member before being dismissed by Premier Rees on 11 November 2008.[4] His portfolios of Science and Medical Research Small Business and assisting the Minister for Health (Cancer) were reassigned to Jodi McKay.
- On 23 January 2009 Graham West was appointed to the new role of assisting the Premier on Veteran's Affairs.
- John Robertson was promoted to the ministry on 30 January 2009, appointed to the new portfolios of Public Sector Reform, Special Minister of State and Corrective Services, partly replacing the abolished portfolio of Minister for Justice.
- On 30 January 2009 Steve Whan was promoted to the ministry, replacing Jodi McKay in the portfolio of Small Business and Tony Kelly in the portfolio of Emergency Services. Kelly replaced Phil Costa in the portfolio of Rural Affairs.
- John Della Bosca resigned from the ministry on 31 August 2009 following the public revelation of a 6-month extra-marital affair.[5][6] His responsibilities were initially reassigned to John Hatzistergos.
- On 14 September 2009 Carmel Tebbutt was appointed to the portfolio of Health and was replaced in Climate Change and the Environment by John Robertson and in Commerce by Jodi McKay.
- On 14 September 2009 Nathan Rees replaced John Hatzistergos in the portfolio of the Central Coast.
- Tony Kelly was replaced as Minister for Police by Michael Daley and Daley's portfolio of Roads was abolished.
- On 14 September 2009 Verity Firth was replaced as Minister for Women by Linda Burney.
- On 14 September 2009 John Robertson replaced Ian Macdonald as Minister for Energy.
- Steve Whan replaced Tony Kelly as Minister for Rural Affairs.
- David Borger was given the new role of Minister assisting the Minister for Transport.
- On 14 September 2009 Barbara Perry replaced Jodi McKay in the role of Assisting the Minister for Health in relation to Cancer.
- On 17 November 2009 Joe Tripodi was replaced in the portfolio of Finance by Michael Daley, in Infrastructure by Kristina Keneally, in Regulatory Reform by Peter Primrose and in Ports and Waterways by Paul McLeay.
- On 17 November 2009 Ian Macdonald was replaced in the portfolio of Primary Industries by Tony Kelly, in Mineral Resources by Peter Primrose and in State Development by Eric Roozendaal.
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References
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