Brumby ministry

Brumby Ministry

66th ministry of Victoria, Australia
Date formed3 August 2007
Date dissolved2 December 2010
People and organisations
MonarchElizabeth II
GovernorDavid de Kretser
PremierJohn Brumby
Deputy premierRob Hulls
No. of ministers20
Member party  Labor
Status in legislatureMajority government
55 / 88
Opposition party    LiberalNational Coalition
Opposition leaderTed Baillieu
History
PredecessorBracks ministry
SuccessorBaillieu ministry

The Brumby Ministry was the 66th ministry of the Government of Victoria. It was led by the Premier of Victoria, John Brumby, and Deputy Premier, Rob Hulls. It succeeded the Bracks Ministry on 3 August 2007, following the retirement of former Premier Steve Bracks and his deputy John Thwaites. Brumby had been sworn as Premier three days earlier on 30 July; he had temporarily been sworn into Bracks' and Thwaites' portfolios until a reshuffle could be arranged.

The ministry underwent three reshuffles since 2007. The first occurred in December 2008, triggered by the resignation of Theo Theophanous: Martin Pakula was appointed to the resulting vacancy.[1] The second reshuffle occurred on 20 January 2010 after Lynne Kosky's resignation. A new position of Minister for the Respect Agenda was created. Pakula took on Kosky's role as Minister for Public Transport, with Peter Bachelor given the Arts portfolio. Lily D'Ambrosio joined the Cabinet as Minister for Community Development.[2][3] The third occurred when Bob Cameron resigned on 7 October 2010. James Merlino became Minister for Police and Minister for Corrections in his place, although Cameron retained the Emergency Services portfolio until the November state election in order to finalise key bushfire reforms.[4]

  1. ^ Victoria Government Gazette No. S 392 Archived 6 July 2011 at the Wayback Machine, Government of Victoria, 29 December 2008.
  2. ^ Victoria Government Gazette No. S 25 Archived 6 July 2011 at the Wayback Machine, Government of Victoria, 20 January 2010.
  3. ^ Rood, David; Sarah-Jane Collins: Brumby installs his November election cabinet, The Age, 21 January 2010.
  4. ^ Ministers quit Brumby's cabinet, ABC News, 7 October 2010.