Lynne Walker (politician)

http://dbpedia.org/resource/Lynne_Walker_(politician) an entity of type: Thing

Lynne Michele Walker (born 19 June 1962) is an Australian politician. She was a Labor member of the Northern Territory Legislative Assembly from 2008 to 2016, representing the seat of Nhulunbuy Walker was an outspoken critic of the former Country Liberals' government's management of the closure at the Rio Tinto aluminum refinery. On 23 April 2015, Walker was installed as deputy leader under Michael Gunner, and hence Deputy Leader of the Opposition, following the Northern Territory leadership challenge. rdf:langString
rdf:langString Lynne Walker (politician)
rdf:langString Lynne Walker
rdf:langString Lynne Walker
xsd:date 1962-06-19
xsd:integer 22199311
xsd:integer 1069581167
rdf:langString Northern Territory Legislative
xsd:date 1962-06-19
xsd:integer 2012 2016
rdf:langString Australian
rdf:langString Teacher
rdf:langString Australian Labor Party
rdf:langString Lawrence Walker
xsd:integer 11 12
xsd:date 2016-08-27
xsd:date 2008-08-09
rdf:langString Member for Nhulunbuy
xsd:integer 2008
rdf:langString Lynne Michele Walker (born 19 June 1962) is an Australian politician. She was a Labor member of the Northern Territory Legislative Assembly from 2008 to 2016, representing the seat of Nhulunbuy Walker was an outspoken critic of the former Country Liberals' government's management of the closure at the Rio Tinto aluminum refinery. On 23 April 2015, Walker was installed as deputy leader under Michael Gunner, and hence Deputy Leader of the Opposition, following the Northern Territory leadership challenge. Walker was widely tipped to become Deputy Chief Minister following the 2016 Territory election. Not only was Labor been far ahead of the governing CLP in polling, but Walker sat on a seemingly insurmountable majority of 13.7 percent. However, in a major upset, while Labor won the third-biggest majority in Territory history, Walker was defeated by independent candidate and indigenous activist Yingiya Mark Guyula by eight votes. She suffered a swing of just under eight percent on the first count, and ultimately lost after CLP preferences flowed overwhelmingly to Guyula. The result, which was not known for days, saw Walker become the only Labor incumbent to be defeated at the election. Walker sought to return to the legislature for Labor at the 2020 election, standing in Mulka, a reconfigured version of her old seat. She lost election to incumbent independent Yingiya Mark Guyula.
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 5973

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