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Trent Zimmerman
Australian federal politician

Trent Zimmerman

The basics

Quick Facts

Intro
Australian federal politician
Places
Work field
Gender
Male
Place of birth
Sydney
Age
56 years
The details (from wikipedia)

Biography

Trent Moir Zimmerman (born 15 October 1968) is an Australian politician. He was elected to succeed Joe Hockey as the Liberal Party of Australia member of the House of Representatives seat of North Sydney at the 2015 by-election. Zimmerman is one of five openly LGBTI current members of the Parliament of Australia and the first openly LGBTI member of the House of Representatives.
He was a vice-president and acting-President of the NSW Division of the Liberal Party of Australia and was also previously Deputy Chief Executive and Director, Transport Policy, of the Tourism and Transport Forum of Australia. He is a member of the board of Epilepsy Action Australia.

Early life

Zimmerman was born in Sydney and is one of two children of Roy and Brenda Zimmerman. His father, Roy Zimmerman OAM, was Master-in-Charge of the GPS preparatory school Wyvern House from 1966 until 1996. Zimmerman attended Newington College, commencing in Wyvern House in 1974 and completing his HSC in 1986. He then studied for a Bachelor of Arts at the University of Sydney.

Politics

After working in the NSW Parliament, Zimmerman became a ministerial adviser in the federal government of John Howard in the environment and heritage portfolio and later as an adviser to then Shadow Treasurer Joe Hockey.

He was President of the Young Liberal Movement of NSW from 1992 to 1993. Zimmerman was a councillor on North Sydney Council for two terms until the local government elections of 2012. During his time as a councillor, Zimmerman lived openly as a gay man and worked actively on LGBT issues, describing the de-funding of the NorthAIDS program as "unforgivable". He also served as Vice President of the Sydney Gay and Lesbian Business Association.

In 2012, Zimmerman was anointed as the Liberal left's candidate for the seat held by Jillian Skinner; however, Skinner decided to stay on in parliament, deferring Zimmerman's political ambitions.

Parliament

Zimmerman won the 2015 North Sydney by-election with a 48.2 percent primary vote after a larger than predicted 12.8 percent swing against the Liberals − more than triple that of the 2015 Canning by-election. It was only the second time since Federation that the Liberals (or their predecessors) did not obtain a majority of the primary vote. Remarkably, this came in the absence of a Labor candidate; Labor has only come close to winning this normally safely conservative seat once, in 1943. The Liberal two-candidate vote of 60.2 percent against independent Stephen Ruff compares to the previous election vote of 65.9 percent against Labor. The reduction of 5.7 percent cannot be considered a "two-party/candidate preferred swing" − when a major party is absent, preference flows to both major parties does not take place, resulting in asymmetric preference flows.

Zimmerman was preselected as the Liberal by-election candidate which was triggered by the resignation of former treasurer Joe Hockey. Zimmerman's appointment was controversial, with now-suspended party member Juris Laucis describing the process as "undemocratic" and "a stitch-up" and reform activist and former Liberal party member John Ruddick called for Liberal voters feeling disenfranchised to send a message to the party by preferencing Zimmerman last. Political journalist Peter Hartcher attributed his preselection to his being an ally of Michael Photios, "the power behind the NSW machine". Whilst a candidate for preselection, Zimmerman was also the head of the body that sets the rules for party elections, a position his opponents described as a "complete conflict of interest." Ted Mack, Hockey's predecessor in the seat, ran a campaign against Zimmerman on behalf of Stephen Ruff, the independent who ran second in the by-election.

Zimmerman is one of five openly LGBTI current members of the Parliament of Australia and the first openly LGBTI member of the House of Representatives. Zimmerman has indicated he will speak out on LGBTI issues and declared his support for marriage equality in Australia and stated "I would have supported a free vote and preferred it to be decided by the Parliament. But that's the path we are going to go down so I will be strongly advocating, both in North Sydney and more broadly, a Yes vote for that plebiscite".

Zimmerman was sworn into parliament on 2 February 2016.

The contents of this page are sourced from Wikipedia article. The contents are available under the CC BY-SA 4.0 license.
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