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| caption = Senator Kim Carr Minister for Innovation, Industry, Science and Research | caption = Kim Carr waiting for the result of a plebiscite
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Revision as of 01:29, 22 July 2008

Senatorthe Hon Kim Carr
Kim Carr waiting for the result of a plebiscite
Minister for Innovation, Industry, Science and Research
Incumbent
Assumed office
3 December 2007
Preceded byIan Macfarlane
Personal details
Born (1955-07-02) 2 July 1955 (age 69)
Tumut, New South Wales, Australia
NationalityAustralia Australian
Political partyAustralian Labor Party
Alma materUniversity of Melbourne
ProfessionTeacher

Kim John Carr (born 2 July 1955) has been an Australian Labor Party member of the Australian Senate since April 1993, representing the state of Victoria. He was elected to the Senate at the March 1993 election, and was due to take his seat on 1 July. When retiring Senator John Button resigned before the expiry of his term, however, Carr was appointed to the resulting casual vacancy in April.

Carr was born in Tumut, New South Wales. He was educated at the University of Melbourne where he obtained a Master of Arts degree and a Diploma of Education. He joined the Labor Party in 1975. He was a secondary school teacher for nine years before becoming a political staffer for Victorian government ministers Joan Kirner and Andrew McCutcheon. He was a close associate of Wally Curran, the left-wing head of the meatworkers union, the AMIEU. He returned to teaching briefly after Labor lost office in Victoria and briefly performed research for the meatworkers prior to his appointment to the Senate. Carr has four children from two marriages.

Carr became a Shadow Parliamentary Secretary in March 1996 in addition to being the Manager of Opposition Business in the Senate until his election to the Opposition Shadow Ministry in November 2001. He was Shadow Minister for Science and Research from then until October 2004. He was also Shadow Minister for Industry and Innovation from July 2003 to October 2004. He has been Shadow Minister for Public Administration and Open Government, Shadow Minister for Indigenous Affairs and Reconciliation and Shadow Minister for the Arts October 2004 to June 2005, when he was appointed Shadow Minister for Housing, Urban Development, Local Government and Territories. He is one of five voting Victorian members of the party's National Executive.

Carr is a leading figure in the Victorian Labor Party's Socialist Left faction, and is regarded as its organisational head. His prominence in factional politics has made him a deeply disliked figure to members of the rival Labor Unity faction, who refer to him as "Kim Il-Carr", a pun on the name of the late North Korean dictator Kim Il-sung.

In 2005, Carr was instrumental in the recruitment to the Socialist Left of Mohamad Abbouche, a former mayor of the City of Hume in suburban Melbourne, who had been previously accused of branch stacking by members of the Socialist Left faction. In return for his change of alignment, Abbouche was promised a seat in the Legislative Council by Carr. Abbouche's candidacy was subsequently vetoed by Victorian Premier Steve Bracks.

During the round of bitterly contested preselections for Labor-held federal electorates in early 2006, Carr frequently accused the Labor Unity faction of branch stacking and other offences against party rules. Labor Unity members regard these charges as hypocritical, claiming that the Socialist Left under Carr's leadership had invented the most common form of branch stacking, the mass recruitment of members of ethnic minorities into party branches.

After the 2007 federal election, Prime Minister Kevin Rudd appointed Carr as Minister for Innovation, Industry, Science and Research, and he was sworn into office by Governor-General Michael Jeffery on 3 December.

References

  1. Australian Labor Party biography of Kim Carr retrieved 18 March 2006
  2. The Age "Labor faction's deal with former foe branded 'rank hypocrisy'" 4 October 2005
  3. Rudd hands out portfolios, Australian Broadcasting Corporation, 29 November 2007.

See also

External links

http://minister.innovation.gov.au/SenatortheHonKimCarr/Pages/BiographicalInfo.aspx http://www.aph.gov.au/Senate/senators/homepages/senators.asp?id=AW5 http://www.alp.org.au/people/carr_kim.php


Political offices
Preceded byIan Macfarlane (industry)
Julie Bishop (science)
Minister for Innovation, Industry,
Science and Research

2007 – present
Incumbent
Current members of the Cabinet of Australia
Current members of the Australian Senate
Coalition (30)
Liberal* (24)
National* (6)
Labor (25)
Greens (11)
One Nation (2)
Lambie (1)
United Australia (1)
Independent (6)
*The Liberal and National totals include members of the Liberal National Party of Queensland and the Country Liberal Party (NT) who caucus with either the federal Liberals or Nationals.


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