Catherine Cusack (politician) - Biography

Biography

In her inaugural parliamentary speech, Catherine identified herself as the great-granddaughter of a former Labor politician, John Cusack. She grew up near Yass in southern New South Wales, daughter of Greg Cusack (born 1930), a former Australian motor racing and motor rally champion. She joined the Young Liberals while studying Economics at Sydney University and was elected their first female president in 1985. Cusack worked for Greiner government minister Virginia Chadwick in the Community Services and Education portfolios. She left in 1992 to work in the private sector, moving to the NSW Far North Coast in 2000 following the appointment of her husband to the Northern Rivers Area Health Service.

In 2003, the then Liberal leader John Brogden appointed her to Shadow Cabinet in the Juvenile Justice and Women's portfolios. She later served as Shadow Minister for Climate Change and Environmental Sustainability. When her party won government at the 2011 election, she was controversially dumped from the front bench by premier Barry O'Farrell, allegedly for having alienated the Shooters and Fishers Party by saying she would not allow hunting in national parks.

In May 2011, Catherine Cusack received wide political support for a strong critique of her government's controversial decision to retrospectively alter a Solar Bonus Scheme, by cutting tariffs from 60 to 40 cents for customers who had signed up before November 2010 under the defeated Labor government. In a letter to the premier she wrote that "It is a central tenant (sic) of Liberal and Conservative philosophy that any retrospective legislation to alter contracts is unprecedented and repugnant" and that "The politics of the decision are unacceptably high risk for the Government."

At a hearing of the NSW Parliament's Standing Committee on Social Issues in March 2013, Cusack reiterated her support for gay marriage, but went on to state that she feels "very excluded and often looked down upon by gay culture." She also accused the AIDS Council of NSW (ACON) and the gay community in general of "'looking down' on women and deliberately excluding them from efforts to combat AIDS." ACON CEO Nicolas Parkhill was "taken aback" when questioned about whether the organisation "was delivering HIV/AIDS programs to the 20 per cent of people who contract the disease every year who are heterosexual." When questioned in April, Cusack stood by her comments, explaining that "Gay culture is very strong and vibrant in Sydney and I was just asking whether that was an inclusive culture." Parkhill defended that "there's always room for improvement for how women are treated in society, but to characterise the gay community as having some sort of issue over and above the rest of society I think was unnecessary."

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