Deputy Premier of South Australia

The Deputy Premier of South Australia is the second-most senior officer in the Government of South Australia. The Deputy Premiership is a ministerial portfolio in the Cabinet of South Australia, and the Deputy Premier is appointed by the Governor on the advice of the Premier of South Australia.

Deputy Premier of South Australia
Incumbent
Vickie Chapman

since 19 March 2018
Department of the Premier and Cabinet
StyleThe Honourable
Member of
Reports toPremier of South Australia
Seat45 Pirie Street, Adelaide
NominatorPremier of South Australia
AppointerGovernor of South Australia
on the advice of the premier
Term lengthAt the Governor's pleasure
Formation26 March 1968
First holderDes Corcoran

The current Deputy Premier since 2018 is Vickie Chapman of the South Australian Division of the Liberal Party of Australia.[1]

History

The office of Deputy Premier was created in March 1968. The first to serve in the position was Labor deputy leader Des Corcoran. Prior to that time the term was sometimes used unofficially for the second-highest ranking minister in the government, usually the Treasurer.

In both Labor and Liberal governments, the Deputy Premier is usually the party's deputy leader.

Two Deputy Premiers have subsequently become Premier in their own right: Des Corcoran and Rob Kerin. This last happened in 2001, when Rob Kerin became premier after John Olsen's resignation. Dean Brown did the reverse, becoming Deputy Premier to Rob Kerin, 5 years after his own premiership ended at the hands of John Olsen.

South Australia's longest-serving Deputy Premier is Kevin Foley, who served in the position from March 2002 to February 2011.

Duties

The duties of the Deputy Premier are to act on behalf of the Premier in his or her absence overseas or on leave. The Deputy Premier has additionally always held at least one substantive portfolio. It is possible for a minister to hold only the portfolio of Deputy Premier, but this has never happened.

If the Premier were to die, become incapacitated or resign, the Governor would normally appoint the Deputy Premier as Premier. If the governing or majority party had not yet elected a new leader, that appointment would be on an interim basis. Should a different leader emerge, that person would then be appointed Premier.

List of Deputy Premiers of South Australia

#NameTook OfficeLeft OfficePartyPremier
1Des Corcoran26 March 196816 April 1968LaborDon Dunstan
-Des Corcoran2 July 197015 March 1979LaborDon Dunstan
2Hugh Hudson15 March 197918 September 1979LaborDes Corcoran
3Roger Goldsworthy18 September 197910 November 1982LiberalDr David Tonkin
4Jack Wright10 November 198216 July 1985LaborJohn Bannon
5Don Hopgood16 July 19854 September 1992LaborJohn Bannon
6Frank Blevins4 September 199214 December 1993LaborLynn Arnold
7Stephen Baker14 December 199328 November 1996LiberalDean Brown
8Graham Ingerson28 November 19967 July 1998LiberalJohn Olsen
9Rob Kerin7 July 199822 October 2001LiberalJohn Olsen
10Dean Brown22 October 20015 March 2002LiberalRob Kerin
11Kevin Foley5 March 20026 February 2011LaborMike Rann
12John Rau7 February 201119 March 2018LaborMike Rann
Jay Weatherill
13Vickie Chapman19 March 2018PresentLiberalSteven Marshall

Living former Deputy Premiers

NameTerm of officeDate of birth
Don Hopgood 19851992 5 September 1938
Stephen Baker 19931996 30 May 1946
Graham Ingerson 19961998 27 August 1941
Rob Kerin 19982001 4 January 1954
Dean Brown 20012002 5 April 1943
Kevin Foley 20022011 25 September 1960
John Rau 20112018 20 March 1959

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.