- Brian Greig
Brian Andrew Greig (born
22 February 1966 ),Australia n politician, was anAustralian Democrats member of theAustralian Senate from 1999 to 2005, representing the state ofWestern Australia .Greig was born in Fremantle, but his family moved to the small village of
Lancelin at the age of four. He went to primary school there, but received his secondary education as a boarder atHale School , Perth. He studied arts atMurdoch University , where he became involved in student politics.While in university, Greig campaigned on the issue of student fees and, in 1986, he helped re-establish the National Union of Students. He began to get involved in
gay rights activism during the 1990s, and helped establish an Australian Council for Lesbian and Gay Rights, which is now defunct.During the 1990s, Greig worked for several
Australian Labor Party politicians, including Senator Peter Cook, but became disillusioned with Labor and joined the Democrats. Between 1995 and 1999, he was an elected local-government councillor in the West Australian town of Vincent.At the October 1998 federal election, Greig was elected to the Senate. He declared his homosexuality in his maiden parliamentary speech, being the first Federal parliamentarian to do so. Though he campaigned strongly on issues of social justice, he remained little known until 2002. Former leader
Meg Lees had been attempting to oust her successor and, with the assistance of three other senators - deputy leaderAden Ridgeway (NSW),Andrew Murray (WA) andJohn Cherry (Qld), forced the resignation of leaderNatasha Stott Despoja . Ridgeway was expected to fill the vacancy but Greig made a late challenge and won a surprise victory. He led the party for six weeks until succeeded byAndrew Bartlett in October, 2002.In the Senate, Greig was responsible for introducing three pieces of legislation - a bill to outlaw
genocide in Australia, a bill to eliminate discrimination againstgay ,lesbian , bisexual,transgender andintersex people and a bill to promote government use ofopen source software above all others. However, all three were unsuccessful, as they were blocked by the Liberal-National government.Greig stood for re-election at the 2004 election, but lost his seat to
Rachel Siewert of theAustralian Greens . His term expired30 June 2005 .External links
* [http://www.yawningbread.org/apdx_1999/imp-065.htm Senator Brian Greig's maiden speech in Canberra]
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