List of senators from New South Wales

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is a list of senators from the state of New South Wales since Australian Federation in 1901.

List[]

Senate Election Senator
(Party)
Senator
(Party)
Senator
(Party)
Senator
(Party)
Senator
(Party)
Senator
(Party)
Senator
(Party)
Senator
(Party)
Senator
(Party)
Senator
(Party)
Senator
(Party)
Senator
(Party)
1901–1903 1901 Albert Gould
(Free Trade/
Liberal)
Edward Millen
(Free Trade/
Liberal/
Nationalist)
Edward Pulsford
(Free Trade)
James Walker
(Free Trade/
Liberal)
John Neild
(Free Trade)
Richard O'Connor
(Protectionist)
6 senators per state
1901-1950
1903 Dr Charles Mackellar
(Protectionist)
1904–1906 1903 John Gray
(Free Trade)
1907–1910 1906
1910–1913 1910 Arthur Rae
(Labor)
Albert Gardiner
(Labor)
Allan McDougall
(Labor)
1913–1914 1913 Charles Oakes
(Liberal)
1914–1917 1914 David Watson
(Labor)
John Grant
(Labor)
1917–1920 1917 Herbert Pratten
(Nationalist)
Josiah Thomas
(Nationalist)
1920–1923 1919 Charles Cox
(Nationalist
/UAP)
Walter Duncan
(Nationalist)
1921 Henry Garling
(Nationalist)
1922 Allan McDougall
(Labor)
1923–1926 1922 John Grant
(Labor)
Walter Massy-Greene
(Nationalist)
1924 Jack Power
(Labor)
1925 William Gibbs
(Labor)
Percy Abbott
(Nationalist)
1926–1929 1925 Walter Massy-Greene
(Nationalist/
UAP)
Josiah Thomas
(Nationalist)
1928 Albert Gardiner
(Labor)
1929–1932 1928 Arthur Rae
(Labor/
Lang Labor)
James Dunn
(Labor/
Lang Labor)
John Dooley
(Labor)
1931 Patrick Mooney
(Lang Labor)
1932–1935 1931 Charles Hardy
(Country)
1935–1938 1934 Dick Dein
(UAP)
Guy Arkins
(UAP)
Mac Abbott
(Country)
1938–1941 1937 Bill Ashley
(Labor)
John Armstrong
(Labor)
Stan Amour
(Labor)
Tom Arthur
(Labor)
1941–1944 1940 James Arnold
(Labor)
William Large
(Labor)
1944–1947 1943 Donald Grant
(Labor)
1947–1950 1946
1950–1951 1949 Albert Reid
(Country)
Bill Spooner
(Liberal)
John McCallum
(Liberal)
John Tate
(Liberal)
10 senators per state
1950-1985
1951–1953 1951 Alister McMullin
(Liberal)
1953–1956 1953 Ken Anderson
(Liberal)
1956–1959 1955
1958 James Ormonde
(Labor)
1959–1962 1958 Colin McKellar
(Country)
James Ormonde
(Labor)
1962–1965 1961 Doug McClelland
(Labor)
Joe Fitzgerald
(Labor)
Lionel Murphy
(Labor)
1965–1968 1964 Tony Mulvihill
(Labor)
Tom Bull
(Country)
Bob Cotton
(Liberal)
1968–1971 1967
1970 Douglas Scott
(Country)
Jack Kane
(DLP)
1971–1974 1970 Arthur Gietzelt
(Labor)
Jim McClelland
(Labor)
John Carrick
(Liberal)
1974–1975 1974 Douglas Scott
(Country)
Peter Baume
(Liberal)
1975–1978 1975 Kerry Sibraa
(Labor)
Misha Lajovic
(Liberal)
1978–1981 1977 Colin Mason
(Democrat)
Chris Puplick
(Liberal)
Kerry Sibraa
(Labor)
1981–1983 1980 Bruce Childs
(Labor)
1983–1985 1983 Graham Richardson
(Labor)
1985–1987 1984 Chris Puplick
(Liberal)
Michael Baume
(Liberal)
David Brownhill
(National)
John Morris
(Labor)
1987–1990 1987 Sue West
(Labor)
Paul McLean
(Democrat)
Robert Wood
(NDP)
1988 Bronwyn Bishop
(Liberal)
Irina Dunn
(Independent)
1989 John Faulkner
(Labor)
1990–1993 1990 Stephen Loosley
(Labor)
Vicki Bourne
(Democrat)
Sue West
(Labor)
1991 Karin Sowada
(Democrat)
John Tierney
(Liberal)
1993–1996 1993 Sandy Macdonald
(National)
1994 Belinda Neal
(Labor)
Bob Woods
(Liberal)
Michael Forshaw
(Labor)
1995 Tom Wheelwright
(Labor)
1996–1999 1996 Bill Heffernan
(Liberal)
Helen Coonan
(Liberal)
1997 Marise Payne
(Liberal)
George Campbell
(Labor)
1999–2002 1998 Steve Hutchins
(Labor)
Aden Ridgeway
(Democrat)
2000 Sandy Macdonald
(National)
2002–2005 2001 Kerry Nettle
(Greens)
Ursula Stephens
(Labor)
2005–2008 2004 Fiona Nash
(National)
Concetta Fierravanti-Wells
(Liberal)
2008–2011 2007 Mark Arbib
(Labor)
Doug Cameron
(Labor)[1]
John Williams
(National)
2011–2014 2010 Lee Rhiannon
(Greens)
Matt Thistlethwaite
(Labor)
Arthur Sinodinos
(Liberal)
2012 Bob Carr
(Labor)
2013 Deborah O'Neill
(Labor)
Sam Dastyari
(Labor)
2014–2016 2013 David Leyonhjelm
(Liberal Democrats)
2015 Jenny McAllister
(Labor)
2016–2019 2016 Brian Burston
(One Nation
/United)
2017 Jim Molan
(Liberal)
2018 Mehreen Faruqi
(Greens)
Kristina Keneally
(Labor)
2019–2022 2019 Andrew Bragg
(Liberal)
Hollie Hughes
(Liberal)
Tony Sheldon
(Labor)
Perin Davey
(National)
Tim Ayres
(Labor)
2019 Jim Molan
(Liberal)

References[]

  1. ^ "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 19 June 2018. Retrieved 24 September 2018.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
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