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Jane Prentice
Jane Prentice
from Wikipedia

Jane Prentice (née Righetti; born 22 June 1953) is a former Australian politician who served as a member of the House of Representatives from 2010 to 2019, representing the Division of Ryan in Queensland. She previously served on the Brisbane City Council from 2000 to 2010. She is a member of the Liberal National Party of Queensland and sat with the Liberal Party in federal parliament.

Key Information

Early career

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Prentice was born in Melbourne on 22 June 1953.[1] She is one of two daughters born to Janet (née Ellison) and Alan Righetti. Her mother was the granddaughter of George Pearce, a long-serving federal cabinet minister. Her father, of Swiss-Italian descent, was a Royal Australian Air Force (RAAF) pilot in World War II, and spent two years as a prisoner of war after being shot down in Libya.[2]

Prentice spent her early years in north-east Victoria where her father farmed sheep with two of his brothers. The family moved to Sydney in 1960, where her father became a technical education instructor at the School of Sheep and Wool and later worked for Allied Feed Mills and Inghams.[2]

Prentice holds qualifications from the Australian Institute of Company Directors and Australian Institute of Management.[1] She established an event management company in Brisbane in the early 1980s.[3] She also worked as director of the Visitors and Convention Bureau in Brisbane, business manager at the Australian Telecommunications User Group, and managing director of Conventions Queensland.[1]

Politics

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While living in Sydney, Prentice was a state vice-president of the Young Liberals and chairman of its Mosman branch. She served on the New South Wales state executive of the Liberal Party from 1976 to 1977 and was also a staffer for Liberal senator John Carrick. After moving to Queensland, she chaired the party's Taringa branch.[1]

Brisbane City Council

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Prentice was a councillor on the Liberal-controlled Brisbane City Council from 2000 to 2010, representing Walter Taylor Ward.[4]

Member of Parliament

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At the 2010 federal election, Prentice comfortably defeated sitting local member, Michael Johnson, who was expelled from the Liberal Party in May 2010 for allegedly bringing the party into disrepute, having used his political position and entitlements to further his business interests and those of a company set up almost exclusively to fund his prolific overseas travel.[5][6]

On 26 February 2014, Prentice tabled in the house a petition organised by the Pharmacy Guild of Australia in response to proposed changes to Pharmaceutical Benefits Scheme and the impact on community pharmacies. This petition, signed by 1,210,471 people, is the largest petition ever received by the Australian parliament.[7] Prentice also delivered the first speech in the House of Representatives to include Auslan.

Prentice was appointed Assistant Minister for Disability Services in February 2016, as a member of the First Turnbull Ministry.[8] Following a reshuffle after the July 2016 federal election, her title was changed to Assistant Minister for Social Services and Disability Services. She did not retain her position when Turnbull was replaced as prime minister by Scott Morrison in August 2018.[1]

In May 2018, she was defeated for LNP preselection to recontest her seat at the 2019 Australian federal election by Julian Simmonds, a member of the Brisbane City Council.[9]

Personal life

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Prentice had two children with her husband Ian Prentice, whom she married in 1977. He was a barrister by profession who also served in the Queensland Legislative Assembly in the early 1980s.[10]

References

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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Jane Prentice is an Australian former politician who served as the member of the Australian House of Representatives for the Division of Ryan in Queensland from 2010 to 2019, representing the Liberal National Party of Queensland (LNP) and sitting with the Liberal Party. She was first elected in 2010, re-elected in 2013 and 2016, and did not contest the 2019 federal election after losing LNP preselection in 2018. During her parliamentary career, Prentice held ministerial roles in the Coalition government, including Assistant Minister for Disability Services from 18 February 2016 until shortly after the July 2016 election, and then Assistant Minister for Social Services and Disability Services from mid-2016 until 24 August 2018. Her work focused particularly on disability policy and social services issues. Prior to entering federal politics, she had experience in local government as a Brisbane City Councillor and other professional roles in Queensland. After leaving parliament, Prentice has continued involvement in community and health-related organizations, including serving as a director on the board of the Queensland Eye Institute Foundation.

Early life and family background

Birth and ancestry

Jane Prentice was born Jane Righetti on 22 June 1953 in Melbourne, Victoria, Australia. She is one of two daughters of Alan Righetti and Janet (née Ellison). Her father, Alan Righetti, was of Swiss-Italian descent; his family originated from the Ticino region of southern Switzerland and migrated to Australia during the 1850s gold rush. Alan served as a Royal Australian Air Force pilot in World War II, where he was shot down over Libya on 22 January 1943 and spent two years as a prisoner of war. Her mother, Janet (née Ellison), is a granddaughter of Sir George Pearce, a long-serving federal cabinet minister instrumental in defence policy and the establishment of the Royal Australian Air Force.

Childhood and move to Sydney

Prentice spent her early years in north-east Victoria, where her father farmed sheep alongside two of his brothers. The family relocated to Sydney in 1960. Upon the move, her father took up a position as head of the School of Sheep and Wool at the NSW Department of Technical Education, where he served as a technical education instructor. He later transitioned to roles in the private sector, working for Allied Feed Mills starting in 1963 and subsequently as general manager of Inghams Enterprises from 1968 until his retirement in 1983.

Early professional and political involvement

Young Liberals and party roles in New South Wales

Jane Prentice became actively involved in the Liberal Party's youth wing in New South Wales during the 1970s through the Young Liberals movement. She served as Vice-President of the Young Liberal Movement (NSW) and as Chairman of the Young Liberal Mosman Branch (NSW). Prentice also held positions within the broader party structure in the state. She was a member of the New South Wales state executive of the Liberal Party from 1976 to 1977. During this period, she worked as a staff member to Liberal senator and Minister for Education, Senator the Hon. Sir John Carrick.

Business career in event management and conventions

After relocating to Queensland, Jane Prentice built a career in business focused on event management, conventions, and related sectors. She served as Director of the Visitors and Convention Bureau in Brisbane, a role dedicated to promoting the city as a destination for visitors and conventions. She subsequently worked as Business Manager at the Australian Telecommunications User Group (Queensland). Prentice later became Managing Director of Conventions Queensland, a convention and event management firm that she owned and managed successfully. In this capacity, she was responsible for organising many of Queensland's largest events. She held professional qualifications from the Australian Institute of Company Directors (MAICD) and the Australian Institute of Management (MAIM).

Local government service

Brisbane City Council tenure

Jane Prentice served as a councillor on the Brisbane City Council representing Walter Taylor Ward from 2000 to 2010. She was affiliated with the Liberal Party of Australia during her tenure and successfully contested local government elections as the party's candidate, including her re-election in 2008. Her service on the council concluded with her resignation in 2010 ahead of her candidacy for federal parliament.

Federal parliamentary career

Election to the House of Representatives

Jane Prentice was elected to the Australian House of Representatives as the member for the Division of Ryan at the federal election held on 21 August 2010, representing the Liberal National Party of Queensland (LNP). She secured 40,713 first preference votes, representing 45.73% of the total, and achieved 57.16% of the two-candidate-preferred vote against Australian Labor Party candidate Steven Miles. Prentice defeated the sitting member Michael Johnson, who had represented Ryan since 1996 but was expelled from the LNP in May 2010 for bringing the party into disrepute. Following Johnson's expulsion, Prentice was preselected as the LNP candidate for Ryan in June 2010 while serving as a Brisbane City Councillor. This victory marked Prentice's entry into federal parliament, where she succeeded in retaining the traditionally safe LNP seat amid the circumstances of her predecessor's departure.

Ministerial roles and policy contributions

Jane Prentice was appointed Assistant Minister for Disability Services on 18 February 2016 in the First Turnbull Ministry. Following the federal election on 2 July 2016, her portfolio was expanded and her title changed to Assistant Minister for Social Services and Disability Services on 19 July 2016. In this role, she was responsible for aspects of disability policy and services, including support for the National Disability Insurance Scheme (NDIS) rollout, disability employment initiatives, and related social services programs within the Department of Social Services. Her ministerial service continued until 28 August 2018, when the ministry was restructured following Malcolm Turnbull's replacement as Prime Minister by Scott Morrison. During her tenure, Prentice focused on advancing disability inclusion, announcing funding allocations for NDIS services across states, grants for remote community accessibility, wage supplementation for workers with disability, and expanded workplace supports. She also promoted early intervention programs and regional NDIS participant intake expansions in areas such as Queensland, Western Australia, and the Northern Territory. In May 2018, Prentice lost preselection for her seat of Ryan. The decision was controversial, drawing disappointment from some Coalition MPs given her status as a sitting assistant minister.

Key parliamentary milestones and departure

Prentice tabled the largest petition in Australian parliamentary history on 26 February 2014, which contained 1,210,471 signatures opposing proposed changes to the Pharmaceutical Benefits Scheme and was organised by the Pharmacy Guild of Australia. This petition remains the largest ever presented to the House of Representatives. In May 2018, Prentice was defeated for Liberal National Party preselection in the Division of Ryan by Julian Simmonds. Her parliamentary service ended on 11 April 2019, when she retired prior to the general election.

Media and television appearances

On-air interviews and panel discussions

Jane Prentice participated in several on-air interviews and panel discussions on Australian television during her federal parliamentary career, appearing as herself primarily on news and current affairs programs. Her credits include an appearance on Capital Hill in 2011 (1 episode), multiple guest spots on Lunchtime Agenda from 2013 to 2014 (8 episodes), an uncredited appearance on Lateline in 2016 (1 episode), five episodes of Sunrise in 2017, one episode each of The Bolt Report and TCN Channel 9 News in 2018, and one episode of The Drum in 2019. These engagements typically occurred in connection with her positions in parliament and government.

Archive footage and special acknowledgments

Jane Prentice received a special thanks credit in the 1997 production Never Look Back. Footage of Prentice has been reused as archive material in 18 titles, predominantly drawn from her television interviews during her time as Assistant Minister for Social Services and Disability Services in 2017–2018. These include an appearance as former Assistant Minister for Social Services and Disability Services (archive footage) in the 2024 episode of the documentary series Nemesis, as well as multiple episodes of Insiders (11 episodes, 2010–2018), 7.30 (6 episodes, 2012–2018), Paul Murray Live (4 episodes, 2017–2018), and The Bolt Report (4 episodes, 2011–2018). Other archive usages feature clips from programs such as Sunrise (3 episodes, 2017) and Today (3 episodes, 2017), among additional titles concentrated in the same period.

Personal life

Marriage and children

Jane Prentice married Ian George Prentice on 2 July 1977. Ian Prentice is a barrister who served as the Liberal member for Toowong in the Queensland Legislative Assembly from 1980 to 1983. The couple has two children, a son and a daughter.

References

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