Humphries Ministry
The Humphries Ministry was the seventh ministry of the Government of the Australian Capital Territory, and was led by Liberal Chief Minister Gary Humphries and his deputy, Brendan Smyth. It was sworn in on 19 October 2000, after the forced resignation of Humphries' predecessor Kate Carnell over the Bruce Stadium affair, and the elevation of Deputy Chief Minister Humphries and new deputy Smyth.
Though Carnell resigned from parliament upon losing the Chief Minister position, she was initially sworn into an interim junior portfolio in the ministry of her successor, until a full ministry could be sworn in in December. The ministry operated until 13 November 2001, when the Labor First Stanhope Ministry was sworn in after the Liberal defeat in the 2001 election.
First arrangement
This covers the period from 19 October 2000 (when the Ministry was sworn in)[1] until the reshuffle on 15 December forced by the resignation from politics of Kate Carnell. Carnell had technically continued to hold a number of minor ministerial portfolios after her resignation as Chief Minister, despite her also resigning from parliament at the same time.
Office | Minister |
---|---|
Chief Minister |
Gary Humphries |
Deputy Chief Minister |
Brendan Smyth |
Michael Moore | |
Minister for Education |
Bill Stefaniak |
Minister for Business, Tourism and the Arts |
Kate Carnell |
Second arrangement
This covers the period from 15 December 2000,[2] until the until 13 November 2001 and was brought about following the resignation from the Assembly from the earlier deposed former Chief Minister Carnell. Carnell was not replaced in the ministry, and Humphries decided to continue to the election with only four ministers after distributing Carnell's portfolios among the remaining members. The reporting of Moore in the list of ministers, in terms of hierarchy, shifted to the bottom of the ministerial list.
Office | Minister |
---|---|
Chief Minister |
Gary Humphries |
Deputy Chief Minister |
Brendan Smyth |
Minister for Education |
Bill Stefaniak |
Michael Moore | |
References
- ↑ "Notification of Appointment of Ministers NI 2000 No 2" (PDF). ACT Gazette. ACT Legislative Assembly. 2000-2. 2000-10-19. Retrieved 2010-08-16.
- ↑ "Notification of Appointment of Ministers NI 2000 No 3" (PDF). ACT Gazette. ACT Legislative Assembly. 2000-3. 2000-12-15. Retrieved 2010-08-16.
Preceded by Second Carnell Ministry |
Humphries Ministry 2000-2001 |
Succeeded by First Stanhope Ministry |