Fiona Simpson

Summary

Fiona Stuart Simpson (born 18 April 1965 in Sea Lake, Victoria) is an Australian politician serving as Liberal National Party (LNP) member of the Queensland Legislative Assembly, representing Maroochydore since 1992. Simpson served as Speaker of the Legislative Assembly of Queensland from 2012 to 2015 and further served as the Deputy Leader of the Queensland National Party and Deputy Leader of the Opposition from 2006 to 2008. Simpson is currently the Shadow Minister for Finance and Better Regulation and Shadow Minister for Integrity in Government.

Fiona Simpson
Shadow Minister for State Development, Infrastructure and Planning
Assumed office
16 November 2020
LeaderDavid Crisafulli
Preceded byAndrew Powell
Shadow Minister for Employment and Small Business
In office
15 December 2017 – 15 November 2020
LeaderDeb Frecklington
Preceded byJarrod Bleijie (Employment)
Scott Emerson (Small Business)
Succeeded byBrent Mickelberg
Shadow Minister for Training and Skills Development
In office
15 December 2017 – 15 November 2020
LeaderDeb Frecklington
Preceded byJarrod Bleijie
Succeeded byBrent Mickelberg
Shadow Minister for Aboriginal, Torres Strait Islander Partnerships and Multicultural Affairs
In office
6 May 2016 – 9 February 2017
LeaderTim Nicholls
Preceded byTarnya Smith
Succeeded bySteve Minnikin
Shadow Minister for Local Government and Main Roads, Community Recovery & Resilience
In office
14 February 2015 – 6 May 2016
LeaderLawrence Springborg
Preceded byTim Mulherin
Succeeded byAndrew Powell
Speaker of the Queensland Legislative Assembly
In office
15 May 2012 – 24 March 2015
DeputyMichael Robinson
Preceded byJohn Mickel
Succeeded byPeter Wellington
Shadow Minister for Community Services and Housing
In office
11 April 2011 – 19 February 2012
LeaderCampbell Newman
Preceded byTed Malone
Succeeded byDesley Scott (Community Services)
Jo-Ann Miller (Housing)
Shadow Minister for Transport and Main Roads
In office
12 August 2008 – 11 April 2011
LeaderLawrence Springborg
John-Paul Langbroek
Preceded byTim Nicholls (Transport)
Howard Hobbs (Main Roads)
Succeeded byScott Emerson (Transport)
Mark Robinson (Main Roads)
Deputy Leader of the Opposition of Queensland
In office
18 September 2006 – 25 July 2008
LeaderJeff Seeney
Lawrence Springborg
Preceded byJeff Seeney
Succeeded byMark McArdle
Member of the Queensland Parliament
for Maroochydore
Assumed office
19 September 1992
Preceded byNew seat
Personal details
Born (1965-04-18) 18 April 1965 (age 59)
Sea Lake, Victoria
Political partyLiberal National (2008–present)
Other political
affiliations
National (1989–2008)

Education edit

Simpson holds a Bachelor of Arts degree in Japanese, Journalism and Government and a Masters of Organisational Leadership. She also has completed the Australian Institute of Company Directors Diploma and an executive leadership course at John F Kennedy School of Government, Harvard. She was a Rotary Exchange Student to Japan, and prior to that attended Nambour State High School.[1]

Pre-Parliamentary career edit

Simpson was an accomplished journalist prior to entering Parliament, winning the prestigious Dalgety Excellence in Rural Journalism Award in 1989, for the State of Queensland.[2]

Political career edit

Fiona Simpson is the longest-serving woman in the LNP party room and following the 2015 election, one of the longest-serving Members of Parliament. When she won the newly created Sunshine Coast seat of Maroochydore in 1992, she was the youngest woman ever to be elected to Legislative Assembly.

Simpson has had shadow ministerial responsibility for Health, Transport, Main Roads, Tourism, Women, Communities, Housing and Waste Watch, in addition to having been elected Deputy Leader of the Queensland National Party (and therefore Deputy Leader of the Opposition) on 18 September 2006.[3] While Deputy Leader, Simpson was a key player in the merger with the Queensland Liberal Party, which created the Liberal National Party of Queensland. She voluntarily stepped aside as Deputy Opposition Leader in favour of Liberal Party Leader Mark McArdle to help facilitate the merger.

Following the LNP's win at the 2012 election, Premier Campbell Newman announced she would be nominated for Speaker.[4] She was elected the body's first female speaker on 15 May 2012.

The end of Simpson's tenure as Speaker was signaled with the LNP's defeat at the 2015 Queensland state election. She unsuccessfully contested the LNP leadership and was subsequently appointed as Shadow Minister for Local Government, Main Roads, Community Recovery and Resilience.[5]

Fiona is currently the Shadow Minister for Intergity in Government, State Development, Infrastructure and Planning.

Speakership edit

Simpson was the first female Speaker of the Queensland Parliament's 150-year existence.[6] Simpson had previously spoken of the need to be proactive in encouraging women to stand for Parliament and other positions of leadership.[7] Following her appointment, Simpson continued to encourage women to consider leadership.[8] As Speaker, Simpson initiated the Queensland Inspiring Women Awards, for Members of Parliament to nominate women in their electorate and these awards had bipartisan support.[9][10]

As Speaker, Simpson formally entered into a Parliamentary Partnership Agreement on 25 September 2013 between the Queensland Parliament and the National Parliament of Papua New Guinea to promote shared understanding and stronger Parliaments.[11] This partnership was in addition to the Parliamentary Twinning relationship with the Parliament of Vanuatu.[12]

Past Controversy edit

During a parliamentary debate in 2002 on changes to anti-discrimination laws that would prevent faith-based schools from discriminating against teachers not of their faith, including gay and lesbian teachers, Simpson referred to acquaintances who are 'former' homosexuals. Simpson also said that she had previously interviewed[13] Sy Rogers, Sy Rogers a leader in ministering to 'former' homosexuals within the controversial ex-gay movement, specifically from Exodus International.[14] In her speech to Parliament, Simpson contrasted what she called "some very genuinely held beliefs" that homosexuality is an unchangeable, born trait with those who believe that homosexuality is a "lifestyle choice", such that homosexuals may choose to "grow into heterosexuality over time".

Media attention was brought to these comments in 2011, and despite the comments drawing criticism from Karen Struthers,[15] mental health psychologist Paul Martin[16] and the gay community,[17] neither Simpson nor the LNP have responded to questions to clarify her personal beliefs on the subject of the ex-gay movement.[18] Fiona Simpson deleted her Facebook page following the controversy after it was inundated with criticism over her support of Exodus.[17]

Contacted in 2015 about the 2002 comments, Simpson provided clarifying remarks, saying "I understand that there are people who have been hurt by (these comments and) their reporting and that deeply saddens me. When I made those comments in 2002 I was sharing a friend’s personal story. I believe equally that every person has the right to have their story heard and that every person is valuable and deserving of respect. I appreciate that different people will have different stories and our community is more welcoming when we listen more carefully and speak more compassionately".[19]

References edit

  1. ^ Carolyn Tucker (1 December 2007). "High and mighty Nambour". The Daily. Retrieved 8 January 2008.
  2. ^ "Member Details | Queensland Parliament".
  3. ^ Steven Wardill and Rosemary Odgers (18 September 2006). "Seeney takes the reins". The Herald Sun. Retrieved 25 April 2012.
  4. ^ "MP Fiona Simpson to be appointed Queensland Parliament's first female Speaker". Courier Mail. 30 March 2012.
  5. ^ Steven Wardill (20 February 2015). "Former Deputy Premier Jeff Seeney left off new LNP frontbench". The Courier-Mail. Retrieved 22 February 2015.
  6. ^ Office of the Speaker parliament.qld.gov.au
  7. ^ "LNP must look at its feminine side". 13 April 2011.
  8. ^ "Why we need more women in leadership roles". 6 March 2014.
  9. ^ Weekly news parliament.qld.gov.au
  10. ^ Weekly news parliament.qld.gov.au
  11. ^ "Queensland Parliament".
  12. ^ Twinning Arrangements parliament.qld.gov.au
  13. ^ Sy Rogers
  14. ^ "Simpson's comments to Parliament (Hansard transcript)" (PDF).
  15. ^ "LGBTI Round Table noms to close Friday". Star Observer. 16 February 2012. Retrieved 9 April 2012.
  16. ^ Hurst, Daniel (27 October 2011). "Gay? Grow out of it, suggests MP". Brisbane Times. Retrieved 30 March 2012.
  17. ^ a b "Calls for resignation over MP's 'ex-gay' comments". Star Observer. 28 October 2011. Retrieved 9 April 2012.
  18. ^ Hurst, Daniel (28 October 2011). "Newman silent on gay cure furore". Brisbane Times. Retrieved 30 March 2012.
  19. ^ Alexander, David (12 February 2015). "Past comments on Homosexuality re-emerge to haunt LNP Leader and MP". Star Observer. Retrieved 23 February 2015.

External links edit

  • Official Biography
  • Maiden Speech
Parliament of Queensland
Preceded by Speaker of the Legislative Assembly of Queensland
2012–2015
Succeeded by
Preceded by
New seat
Member for Maroochydore
1992–present
Incumbent