Alan Brown (Australian Politician)

Alan John Brown (born 25 January 1946), Australian politician, was a Liberal member of the Victorian Legislative Assembly and Leader of the Opposition from 1989 to 1991.

A local businessman before entering politics, Brown entered the Legislative Assembly at the 1979 election as the Liberal member for the now abolished seat of Westernport, easily defeating Doug Jennings who had been expelled from the Liberal Party in 1977. Brown served on the backbench during the Hamer and Thompson governments.

After the Liberals lost government at the 1982 election Brown was promoted to the shadow ministry were he served as Shadow Minister for Youth, Sport and Education, Shadow Minister for Housing and Aboriginal Affairs and Shadow Minister for Transport under the leadership of Jeff Kennett. However after the Liberals were narrowly defeated at the 1988 election many Liberals became unhappy with Kennett's leadership, and those opposed to him in the party room managed to install Brown as leader. While Brown failed to take full advantage of the various crisis involving the Labor government and was defeated by Kennett another party room coup in 1991 he did successfully negotiate a Coalition agreement with the Nationals with whom relations were traditionally poor in Victoria. The two parties remained in Coalition until the defeat of the Kennett government in 1999.

After the Liberals were returned to power after the 1992 election Brown served as Minister for Public Transport. In late 1996 the Kennett Government appointed him as Agent General for Victoria. The resulting by-election in his safe seat of Gippsland West (Westernport having been renamed in 1985) was won by Independent Labor candidate Susan Davies who would go on to play an decisive role in defeating the Kennett government.

Famous quotes containing the words alan and/or brown:

    People must not do things for fun. We are not here for fun. There is no reference to fun in any act of Parliament.
    —A.P. (Sir Alan Patrick)

    The old brown hen and the old blue sky,
    Between the two we live and die
    The broken cartwheel on the hill.
    Wallace Stevens (1879–1955)