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Jon Stanhope

Jon Stanhope (born 1951) is the current Chief Minister of the Australian Capital Territory, representing the Australian Labor Party.

Stanhope was born in Gundagai, New South Wales but moved down the road to Canberra to study at the Australian National University. After graduation from his law degree he became a legal officer for the public service and a staffer for a number of senior ALP figures, including leader Kim Beazley

In 1998 Stanhope was elected to the ACT Legislative Assembly and immediately became party leader. Stanhope played a major role in the downfall of Kate Carnell's Liberal government, concentrating heavily on her involvement in the Bruce Stadium affair .

Stanhope was elected ACT Chief Minister in 2001 when Labor won 8 of the 17 seats in the Assembly, and came within 300 votes of winning a 9th, which would have granted majority government for the first time in ACT history.

Stanhope's handling of the 2003 bushfires was lauded from many sectors of the community. He made headlines later in the year when he personally jumped from a helicopter into a dam to save the pilot of another helicopter which had crashed into the water. However, in May 2004 Stanhope admitted he had received a phone call from an Emergency Services worker on the day before the firestorm, despite previous insistence he had not. Stanhope faced a no-confidence motion in the Assembly, which if passed meant he would have been forced to resign as Chief Minister. The motion was downgraded to a censure motion by the influence of the Australian Democrats and passed in the Assembly, meaning Stanhope kept his job.

At the 2004 ACT election, Stanhope and the ALP won an historic victory, winning majority government for the first time in the Territory's history. The result was a major reversal from the federal election a week earlier, at which Labor was trounced by John Howard's Liberals.

Last updated: 01-04-2007 01:18:57
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