From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The
Shadow Ministry of Kim Beazley
was the opposition
Australian Labor Party
shadow ministry
of
Australia
from January 2005 to December 2006, opposing
John Howard
's
Coalition
ministry
.
- Leader of the Opposition:
Kim Beazley
- Deputy Leader of the Opposition and Shadow Minister for Education, Training, Science and Research:
Jenny Macklin
- Leader of the Opposition in the Senate and Shadow Minister Indigenous Affairs, Family and Community Services: Senator
Chris Evans
- Deputy Leader of the Opposition in the Senate and Shadow Minister for Communications and Information Technology: Senator
Stephen Conroy
- Shadow Treasurer:
Wayne Swan
- Shadow Minister for Superannuation and Intergenerational Finance, Banking and Financial Services: Senator
Nick Sherry
- Shadow Minister for Regional Development:
Simon Crean
- Shadow Minister for Health and Manager of Opposition Business in the House:
Julia Gillard
- Shadow Minister for Industry, Infrastructure and Industrial Relations:
Stephen Smith
- Shadow Minister for Finance:
Lindsay Tanner
- Shadow Minister for Foreign Affairs, International Security and Trade:
Kevin Rudd
- Shadow Minister for Immigration:
Tony Burke
- Shadow Minister for Defence:
Robert McClelland
- Shadow Minister for Homeland Security, Aviation and Transport Security:
Arch Bevis
- Shadow Minister for Consumer Affairs, Health Population and Health Regulation:
Laurie Ferguson
- Shadow Minister for Housing, Urban Development, Local Government and Territories: Senator
Kim Carr
- Shadow Minister for Public Accountability and Human Services:
Kelvin Thomson
- Shadow Minister for Child Care, Youth and Women:
Tanya Plibersek
- Shadow Minister for Environment and Heritage, Deputy Manager of Opposition Business in the House:
Anthony Albanese
- Shadow Minister for Employment and Workplace Participation, Corporate Governance and Responsibility: Senator
Penny Wong
- Shadow Minister for Transport: Senator
Kerry O'Brien
- Assistant Shadow Treasurer and Shadow Minister for Revenue, Small Business and Competition:
Joel Fitzgibbon
- Shadow Attorney-General:
Nicola Roxon
- Shadow Minister for Agriculture and Fisheries:
Gavan O'Connor
- Shadow Minister for Sport and Recreation: Senator
Kate Lundy
- Shadow Minister for Veterans' Affairs and Shadow Special Minister of State :
Alan Griffin
- Shadow Minister for Defence Industry, Procurement and Personnel: Senator
Mark Bishop
- Shadow Minister for Aged Care, Disabilities and Carers: Senator
Jan McLucas
- Shadow Minister for Justice and Customs, Manager of Opposition Business in the Senate:
Joe Ludwig
- Shadow Minister for Pacific Island Affairs and Overseas Aid:
Bob Sercombe
- Shadow Minister for Citizenship and Multicultural Affairs: Senator
Annette Hurley
This opposition made no distinction between the
Shadow Cabinet
and the
Shadow Ministry
.
![](//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/8/88/Flag_of_Australia_%28converted%29.svg/23px-Flag_of_Australia_%28converted%29.svg.png) Australian federal shadow ministries
|
---|
|
|
---|
Leaders
| |
---|
Deputy leaders
| |
---|
Governments
| |
---|
Ministries
| |
---|
Shadow cabinets
| |
---|
State branches
| |
---|
Party institutions
| |
---|
Factions
| |
---|
History
| |
---|
Leadership votes
| |
---|