Lindsay James Tanner (born 24 April 1956) is a former Australian politician. A member of the Australian Labor Party (ALP), he represented the seat of Melbourne in the House of Representatives from 1993 to 2010 and served as Minister for Finance in the Rudd and Gillard governments from 2007 to 2010.
Background
Tanner was born in the East Gippsland town of Orbost. Following the 2001 election, he became Shadow Minister for Communications.
Tanner has been a prominent member of Labor's left faction and it was thought that he might contest the Labor leadership in 2003, when former leader Kim Beazley first challenged Simon Crean. In the second leadership spill in December 2003, Tanner supported Beazley, who lost the party-room ballot to Mark Latham. The following month, Latham appointed Tanner to the new portfolio of Community Relationships, in addition to his existing responsibilities.
After the October 2004 federal election, Tanner was thought to be a candidate for the position of Shadow Treasurer, which had been vacated by Simon Crean. However, once it became clear that Latham did not intend to offer him this position, Tanner announced that he would not stand for a position in the new shadow ministry. He subsequently released a brief statement, stating that he had "no complaint about how Mark Latham has dealt with [him] personally", but adding that he had "serious reservations about the emerging Labor response to our latest election defeat." In June 2005, Tanner was re-elected to the Opposition frontbench and was appointed Shadow Minister for Finance.
right|thumb|A polling booth in Lindsay Tanner's electorate of [[Division of Melbourne|Melbourne]]
The 2007 election saw Tanner's seat of Melbourne face The Greens on the two-party-preferred vote, the first seat to do so at a federal election. Labor retained the seat on 54.7 percent of the two-party-preferred vote. After the successful election of the federal Labor Party, Prime Minister Kevin Rudd retained Tanner as Minister for Finance and Deregulation. The role had previously only been known as Minister for Finance and Administration.
On 24 June 2010, during Julia Gillard's first question time as prime minister, Tanner announced his intention to not re-contest his seat at the next election, citing that he wanted to spend more time at home with his family and stressing he had already planned to do so before the change in leadership.
His tenure as Member for Melbourne ceased on 19 July 2010 when the House of Representatives was dissolved prior to the 2010 federal election. He remained as Minister for Finance throughout the election campaign.
Post-political career
Tanner has been appointed as a Vice Chancellor's Fellow and adjunct professor at Victoria University, and a special adviser to financial firm Lazard Australia. In 2011, the Chartered Institute of Procurement and Supply (CIPS) accorded him the rare distinction of an Honorary Fellowship (FCIPS), the first to be bestowed outside of the UK.
Tanner was elected to the position of Chairman of the Essendon Football Club on 14 December 2015. Tanner is a long-standing supporter of the Bombers and was elected to the Board only 8 months earlier.
In 2016, Tanner joined the Investment Advisory Committee of Six Park, a Melbourne-based automated investment company offering financial advice and management.
On 15 November 2017 it was announced that Tanner was to be appointed a Non-Executive Director of Suncorp Group, effective 1 January 2018.
Personal life
He has been married three times, and has one son and three daughters.
Publications
Tanner has been published extensively in newspapers and journals. His major works are detailed below:
- Russ, Peter; Tanner, Lindsay. (1978) The politics of pollution. Camberwell, VIC: Widescope. . (186 pages)
- Tanner, Lindsay. (1984) "Working class politics and culture : a case study of Brunswick in the 1920s." Parkville, VIC: University of Melbourne (MA thesis). (PDF copy) (161 pages)
- Tanner, Lindsay. (1996) The last battle. Carlton, VIC: Kokkino Press. (216 pages)
- Tanner, Lindsay. (1999) "Engaging with the world" (12th Stan Kelly Memorial Lecture, 30 September 1999). Melbourne: Economic Society of Australia (Victorian Branch). (16 pages)
- Tanner, Lindsay. (1999) Open Australia. Annandale, NSW: Pluto Press. (248 pages)
- Tanner, Lindsay. (2003) Crowded lives. North Melbourne, VIC: Pluto Press. (124 pages) (Review)
- Tanner, Lindsay. (2003) "Courage and compassion" (Arthur Calwell Memorial Lecture, 19 September 2003). Melbourne. (24 pages)
- Tanner, Lindsay. (2007) "Labor going global" (Chifley Memorial Lecture, 14 March 2007). Melbourne: University of Melbourne. (16 pages)
- Tanner, Lindsay. (2011) "Sideshow: Dumbing Down Democracy" Scribe Publications. (256 pages)
- Tanner, Lindsay. (2012) "Politics with Purpose" Scribe Publications. (350 pages)
Fiction
- Tanner, Lindsay. (2016) Comfort Zone, Scribe Publications.
- Tanner, Lindsay. (2019) Comeback, Scribe Publications.
See also
- First Rudd Ministry
- First Gillard Ministry
References
External links
- Fairfax Blog
- Department of Finance and Deregulation profile
- Tanner on the dumbing down of democracy - ABC News interview
