Everything about Wayne Goss totally explained
Wayne Keith Goss (born
26 February,
1951) was
Premier of Queensland from
7 December,
1989 until
19 February,
1996. He was born at
Mundubbera,
Queensland and educated at
Inala High School and the
University of Queensland (LLB). He worked as a solicitor and then with the Aboriginal Legal Service before setting up his own practice. Goss entered state politics as an
Australian Labor Party (ALP)
MLA in 1983 for the Division of Salisbury and later Logan. Elected leader of the opposition in 1988, he became premier the following year.
Goss was victorious in a landslide over
Russell Cooper in the 1989 state election in Queensland and presided over the implementation of many of the reforms of the landmark
Fitzgerald Inquiry into
police corruption. His election win was seen as the beginning of a new era, with
The Courier-Mail declaring "Goss the Boss".
Goss would go on to win a second term, with the same 19-seat majority he won in 1989 over the
National Party and the
Liberal Party (the two non-Labor parties went out of coalition in 1983, but resumed the coalition after the 1992 election).
The Goss Government introduced social reforms such as decriminalising homosexuality. Goss' Chief of Staff as Premier was former
diplomat,
Kevin Rudd, now leader of the federal parliamentary wing of the Australian Labor Party and
Prime Minister of Australia.
The 1995 election, however, was dominated by the Goss Government's plan to clear sensitive bushland for an alternative to one of south-east Queensland's major roadways. A number of seats lost were in Brisbane's Bayside area, and known as 'The Koala seats' because of the passion stirred up by people's perception that the new road would destroy
koala habitat. The
Greens Party preferenced against
Labor and the electorate reacted to Goss's perceived authoritarian style, dealing Labor a narrow one-seat majority.
Irregularities were alleged in the Townsville seat of
Mundingburra, won narrowly by Labor's Ken Davies over the Coalition's Frank Tanti. Following a declaration by the Queensland Supreme court, sitting as a Court of Disputed Returns, a by-election was ordered which was lost by Labor with the seat going to the Coalition, bringing about a
hung Parliament with the balance of power held by
Gladstone based
Independent Liz Cunningham.
Cunningham announced that she was going to support the
Rob Borbidge led Coalition on the floor of Parliament, leaving Goss with no alternative but to resign as
Premier.
Goss returned to the back benches of the
Opposition under new Opposition Leader
Peter Beattie and assumed something of an "elder statesman" role. However, a diagnosis of a
brain tumour (subsequently removed without any problems) forced him to scale back his activities. Despite support from both sides of Parliament - evidenced when the House gave him a
standing ovation on his return from surgery - Goss retired from politics. At the time, rumours circulated that then-Federal Opposition Leader
Kim Beazley had offered him a front-bench position if he ran and won in a Federal election, however no proof has been offered of this suggestion.
Since his retirement from politics, Goss has served as an advisor to
accountancy group
Deloitte Touche Tohmatsu as well as in various other public roles. Goss is currently Chairman of the Australian firm of Deloitte Touche Tohmatsu.
He still lives in
Brisbane with his wife, Roisin, and their two children, Caitlin and Ryan.
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