Fourth Martin Ministry
The Fourth Martin Ministry was the 45th ministry to come from the Northern Territory Legislative Assembly. It came into existence on 15 December 2003 after a major ministerial reshuffle that attempted to deal with two ministers that were widely seen as underperforming. The reshuffle saw Minister for Health and Community Services Jane Aagaard dropped from the ministry entirely and Minister for Transport and Infrastructure, Lands and Planning, Ethnic Affairs and Parks and Wildlife Kon Vatskalis severely demoted. Marion Scrymgour was promoted to fill the vacancy created by Aagaard's dumping, becoming the first ever female Aboriginal minister in Australia.
The ministry operated until 23 June 2005, when Chief Minister Clare Martin, having won the 2005 election, appointed an interim ministry to guide the budget through estimates committees before announcing an expanded ministry the following month. This had been made necessary by the retirement of Jack Ah Kit, the Minister for Community Development, Minister for Housing, Minister for Local Government, Minister for Sport and Recreation, Minister for Regional Development, and Minister assisting the Chief Minister on Indigenous Affairs, at the election.
Office | Minister |
---|---|
Chief Minister |
Hon Clare Martin, MLA |
Deputy Chief Minister and Treasurer |
Hon Syd Stirling, MLA |
Minister for Justice and Attorney-General |
Hon Dr Peter Toyne, MLA |
Leader of Government Business |
Hon Paul Henderson, MLA |
Minister for Community Development |
Hon Jack Ah Kit, MLA |
Minister for Transport and Infrastructure |
Hon Dr Chris Burns, MLA |
Minister for Mines and Energy |
Hon Kon Vatskalis, MLA |
Minister for Family Community Services |
Hon Marion Scrymgour, MLA |
References
- Ministries of the 9th Assembly (Legislative Assembly]
- Carment, David (June 2004). "Australian Political Chronicle: July-December 2003". Australian Journal of Politics and History 50 (2): 307. doi:10.1111/j.1467-8497.2004.247_8.x. ISSN 0004-9522. (under "A Cabinet Reshuffle")
- Carment, David (December 2005). "Australian Political Chronicle: January-June 2005". Australian Journal of Politics and History 51 (4): 622. ISSN 0004-9522. (under "Election Aftermath")
Preceded by Third Martin Ministry |
Fourth Martin Ministry 2003-2005 |
Succeeded by Fifth Martin Ministry |