GOVERNOR-GENERAL’S SPEECH
Address-in-Reply
Mrs Louise Markus, for the committee appointed to prepare an address-in-reply to the speech of His Excellency the Governor-General, presented the proposed address, which was read by the Clerk.
The SPEAKER—Order! Before I call Mrs Markus, I remind honourable members that this is her first speech. I therefore ask that the usual courtesies be extended to her.
Mrs MARKUS (Greenway) (10.19 a.m.)—Mr Speaker, I move:
That the address be agreed to.
I am honoured to be able to move the motion for the address-in-reply to the Governor-General’s speech on behalf
of the parliament and the government. Mr Speaker, as I begin my first speech in parliament, I warmly congratulate
you on your election to the important position of Speaker in this House and ask that God give you the wisdom and
strength that it will require.
I am deeply humbled and honoured to have been chosen by the people of Greenway to be their representative in
this place. It was an exacting campaign and a close result, and I give my absolute commitment to continue to
work, with passion and zeal, just as diligently for those who did not vote for me on this occasion as for those who
did.
The electorate of Greenway was named to honour the famed Australian architect Francis Greenway. It was represented
from its creation in 1984 by Russ Gorman and since 1996 by my predecessor, Frank Mossfield. Frank is
a genuine and decent man who was well-liked by the community. People had only kind words to say about Frank,
and I wish him well in his retirement. Greenway is an amazingly diverse electorate. Many residents, particularly
in the long-established urban areas like Blacktown, Seven Hills, Lalor Park, Toongabbie and Marayong, have
lived there all their lives. They know, love and deeply respect the many traditions and networks that have been
forged throughout their community over decades. In the north of the electorate some of the area remains semirural,
and residents of Schofields, Marsden Park and Vineyard are fiercely proud of their land and their livelihood.
My home suburb of Riverstone is still called the ‘first country town out of Sydney’ by a number of older residents.
The electorate has seen an explosion in population and development as literally thousands of people, many of
them young families, have moved into suburbs like Quakers Hill, Glenwood, Stanhope Gardens and Kellyville
Ridge. With this explosion come massive challenges to provide the service delivery and infrastructure which are
critically needed in the area. Added to all of this are the many varied and wonderful ethnic communities which are
such a vital part of Greenway. For example, there are over 40 nationalities represented in the suburb of Dean Park
alone. More than 30 per cent of the people living in my electorate were born overseas, and without their valuable
achievements and perspectives Greenway would be greatly diminished. I am truly blessed to be able to count
many of these people as my friends and supporters, particularly in the Filipino, Sikh, Maltese, Sudanese, Greek,
Turkish and Egyptian communities.
The people of Greenway are industrious and focused. They know that the expansion of our area provides great
challenges, but through diligence and determination they will rise to meet those challenges. Recently, in the suburb
of Kings Langley, state government regulations forced a child-care centre to drastically cut the numbers of
places it could offer school aged students. This would have left many students of Vardys Road Public School
without before and after school care less than a month later. So the principal of the school, Bob Hahn, and the
president of the P&C, Peggy Taiarol, decided to take the issue into their own hands and set up an out of school
hours care centre at the school. What would take many schools months to do, they achieved in a few short weeks.
A new centre was established, staffed and funded without a break in the children’s care. This sums up the people
of Greenway—resourceful, diligent and committed.
Many commentators have described the people in the area I represent as ‘aspirational’ and I agree, but not perhaps
in the way they intended. The residents and families in Greenway aspire to make their own way—to be able
to own their own homes, to run their businesses, to educate their children, to be safe in their communities, to be
able to get home at a reasonable hour to spend time with their families and to enjoy the quality of life they have
worked so hard to achieve. I am resolved to helping them accomplish just that. But hand in hand with the aspirations
necessarily come challenges, and in Greenway there are many challenges which require immediate attention.
In areas like Riverstone and Lalor Park there are substantial concerns about crime and community safety. New
ideas and strategies need to be implemented to combat these concerns. Tim Priest, the Chair of the Western Sydney
advisory group of the National Community Crime Prevention Program, has already visited Greenway. I am
committed to connecting with him and all members of the community in the quest to minimise crime in the area.
There are also challenges for the emerging ethnic communities who have sought refuge from war torn nations
here in Australia. Many members of these communities have been deeply traumatised by their experiences. Services
and facilities need to be provided to ease their transition into our society. Another great challenge is for
young people in Greenway to find a pathway to employment. For many youths, particularly those with limited
familiarity with English, this can be an almost impossible mountain to climb. But young people are the lifeblood
and future of our country, so it is a challenge that we all share.
The people of Greenway and I are committed to the next generation and setting them up for success. Our efforts
today need to incorporate generational thinking and planning. That is why the Demons Sports Club in Seven Hills
has hired professional coaches and has developed plans to upgrade the playing grounds and facilities—so that the
soccer and rugby league stars of the future can have the best possible chance to achieve their full potential. That is
why the P&C of Metella Road Public School, under the leadership of Dave Clarke, has raised thousands of dollars
to buy an air-conditioning system for the students in their school. However, the power supply is inadequate to run
them and the state government refuses to pay for an upgrade.
I was delighted when the federal government announced that $700 million will be available to government
school P&Cs and principals around the country to address exactly this sort of problem. I am eagerly awaiting the
passage of that legislation. The protection and encouragement of our children is one of the most important responsibilities
of a society. With that in mind, I would like to particularly honour my own father and mother, John and
Jean Tyrell. My father was a man of integrity and faith. In him I was blessed to have had a wonderful role model
for 16 years. He instilled in me a belief that, as a young woman, I was equal to any task to which I applied myself.
Growing up at Gladesville in the electorate of Bennelong, the year I became the daughter of a widow was the
same year our Prime Minister, John Howard, was first elected. My mother continues to live in the home where my
sister and I grew up. I would like to acknowledge their presence in the gallery here today.
My mother is a woman of resilience and faith. Being the eldest of 14 children, she has spent most of her 84
years giving of herself to others. She has always made her own decisions; she is fiercely independent. Before my
father died, he and his brothers were stonemasons in the family business. We were blessed and wanted for nothing.
After he died, my mother had to find a way to support two daughters through high school and university.
From that moment to this, I have worked to pay my own way, to secure a future for myself, my children and the
people in my world. I met my husband, Jim, at a church youth group. Over the years that we have been together,
his support, generosity and love have been an integral part of my life. He is a rare and beautiful man, who is prepared
to walk this new path by my side. He is someone to whom I will always be deeply thankful.
Jim and I have been blessed to have two beautiful children, Joshua and Hannah. My children are two of the
greatest gifts I have been given in my life. They are both precious, valuable and unique individuals with wonderful
futures ahead of them. To be fortunate enough to be surrounded by a loving family only reinforces for me the
notion that the family unit is the foundation stone of our society. As an entity it must be valued, encouraged and
supported in every way possible. I am proud to be a member of a government which recognises that the strongest
thread running through the social fabric of this nation is the family.
My husband, Jim, was born in Papua New Guinea, an extraordinary place of beauty and rugged individuality. I
love the people of that nation. I see a potential in them that is largely untapped—men and women filled with
dreams and desires. To live with people within another culture where I can add value, to be accepted, has added a
richness to my life and to my children’s lives that I cannot quantify and for which I am truly grateful. I love
spending time in Papua New Guinea. I am very pleased to see Australia’s continued strong connection and support
for that nation. I also wish to acknowledge Jim’s family for their love, support and prayers.
After attending a Marist Sisters convent at Woolwich, I enrolled at the University of New South Wales to complete
a bachelor of arts degree in social work. My sole purpose—if you like, calling—in life has always been, and
continues to be, to serve the community, to make a difference in the lives of people, for people are the nation’s
greatest asset.
I have spent my entire working life working in Western Sydney advocating and fighting for people. Until recently
I served as the manager of the Emerge Family Counselling and Enterprise Centre at Blacktown. The centre
provides a broad range of front-line community services, including helping people to overcome drug and alcohol
addiction, providing emergency financial relief for people in crisis, counselling individuals with depression, as
well as helping people to find jobs, secure housing and set up their own businesses. Prior to that, I supervised social
workers in 14 regional offices across Western Sydney for the federal government and worked with Centrelink,
Blacktown TAFE and charitable organisations such as Wesley Mission.
My experience has been diverse: working with people in crisis, supporting and counselling families and teaching
welfare students about social policy. I have learnt much from my life and work. I have learnt that focusing on
solutions rather than problems brings change. I understand that individuals, families and communities often have
the answers and solutions. I know that working in collaboration and partnership with people, not dictating to them,
is the way challenges can best be overcome or change can be achieved. But a prerequisite is that people must actually
want things to be different. For example, confronting unhealthy behaviour, such as violence in the home and
the abuse of a child, is about providing people with the opportunity to take personal responsibility, to break old
patterns of behaviour and to learn new ways of relating. The three fundamentals of overcoming any problem are
identifying an opportunity, making a choice and taking responsibility.
As a professional in the field I have seen people trapped in circumstances and a way of life that they feel powerless
to change. Given the right opportunities, any individual or group can change behaviour or overcome challenges.
Every individual in this nation is valuable and has the potential to give and receive love, to achieve their
dreams and desires, to reach their potential and to contribute to a future for themselves, their family and this nation.
I have always loved working with the most challenging situations and families, because I believe there is always
a way through. I believe in searching for that path, however difficult it is to find, and not being halted by
obstacles placed in the way. Time and time again I have seen people choose to take one step at a time to change. I
have seen young men struggling with drug addiction break free when given value and a relationship with someone
who will believe in them and challenge them to make better decisions. The difference between the young man
who steps into a better life and receives help and the young man who walks away is a decision, a choice, a preparedness
to pay the price for change. However, it is important to qualify that the appropriate services must be available
to help the individual make those changes. The rational choice of the individual, coupled with the appropriate
resources available, can create a bright future.
I bring the wealth of experience that I have to serve both this parliament and the people of Greenway. I am passionate
about the concept of ensuring that the approach to change in communities is about facilitating and empowering
the people, businesses, community organisations and leaders of that community to develop local, relevant,
creative and out-of-the-box solutions and approaches to the issues they face—solutions that focus on how
they want their communities to look in the future. My commitment is to connect the groups and organisations in
my electorate to the relevant bodies and government departments that can assist them to achieve their aspirations.
My goal is a forward-thinking community, full of vibrant organisations and individuals who are identifying creative,
community based plans and solutions to the challenges we face.
This has been an extraordinary journey for me over the past year, but it is not one I could have travelled alone.
To the hardworking members of the Liberal Party, many of whom have been working for this result for decades: I
would not be here without the determined efforts of you all. Thank you particularly to my local campaign chairman,
Neil Lockhart, and his wife, Trish; conference president Councillor Allan Green; Councillor Len Robinson;
Scott Baker; Shane Maher; and especially Geoff and Pat Bisby—two people who sum up what the Liberal Party is
about. I also want to sincerely thank Gerard Benedet and the Young Liberals for their assistance and support.
My campaign could not have happened without scores of new members and supporters who came out of the
woodwork and who are too many to name individually. But I particularly want to acknowledge the work and leadership
of Matt Zschech, Mark Spencer and Matt Breedon—three men whose enthusiasm, integrity and commitment
were immeasurably important to my campaign. I also thank the large number of parliamentarians who
showed their active faith in and support for me by coming to Greenway over the past few months: Julie Bishop,
Joe Hockey, Rod Kemp, Brendan Nelson, Larry Anthony, Kay Patterson, Tony Abbott, Helen Coonan, Jim Lloyd,
Christopher Pyne, Jackie Kelly, Bill Heffernan, Marise Payne, Kerry Bartlett, Pat Farmer, Bronwyn Bishop, John
Tierney and especially my friend, Senator-elect Connie Fierravanti-Wells, and Alan Cadman and the Mitchell
Conference who provided me with invaluable assistance and advice. I am also grateful to members of the New
South Wales parliament who actively showed their support for my candidacy. However, I am most grateful for the
leadership, commitment and support of the person I have the honour of calling my leader, a man of great integrity:
Prime Minister John Howard.
From the moment I was preselected, I made a decision to run my campaign office from day one like an MP’s
office—to fight for people and advocate on their behalf, to listen to their concerns and to work hard to achieve
outcomes. That vision would not have been achievable without a dedicated and talented team who assisted me
every day, including Rebel Neary, Mark Lewis, Shaun Ratcliff and Councillor Greg Dezman. History would not
have been made without this approach and these people. Lastly, I must thank the head office of the Liberal Party,
ably led by President Chris McDiven and the party’s state executive. I particularly want to acknowledge Scott
Morrison, the State Director of the New South Wales Liberal Party, whose counsel, support, advice and commitment
were absolutely critical to the outcome; Reg Chamberlain and his team, who provided exceptional logistical
support; and my campaign manager, Ben Franklin, whose tireless, intelligent and self-sacrificing contribution to
history I will forever appreciate. I am sorry that I cannot mention by name everyone who gave me such amazing
assistance and support. To everyone involved in every aspect of my campaign, I simply say thank you, I appreciate
you and I will never forget what you have done.
The purpose of my life has always been guided by my Christian faith, which is the firm foundation under everything
that makes life worth living. From my earliest years, I can fondly recall the priests and nuns who nurtured
that faith. Over the last 21 years, I have been blessed to sit under the teaching and leadership of Pastors Brian and
Bobbie Houston. Their passion and love for God and for people are unmatched. They have taught me to live life
‘large’, to live for a larger cause. We were not placed on this planet to serve self-interest but to serve the interests
of others. We are indeed blessed to be a blessing.
I am here to serve the people of Greenway, the government of the day and this great nation. My commitment is
to work to support and empower each community group and organisation to help them achieve their aspirations. I
am also committed to supporting every individual in Greenway, no matter what challenges or struggles they face.
There is untapped potential in the lives of those who experience poverty in Greenway and in Australia. While
governments and local members cannot make choices for people, we can provide opportunities through policies
and programs to tap into and develop the potential of each individual.
As a government, our responsibility is to create an environment where the potential of all Australians is realised
and to build the capacity of our citizens to become financially independent and resourceful community participants.
That wealth in potential requires exploration and development. Wealth is ideas, productivity, discipline,
enterprise, inspiration, talent, commitment, entrepreneurialism and creativity. Australia has much wealth to offer
the world.
Land that lies idle is unproductive, yet the correct preparation and effort provides it with the potential to produce
a product that can be marketed and sold and bring a return on investment. Similarly, given the opportunity to
develop, people can begin to lead productive lives. An investment in the lives of people with little has the potential
to produce much. As the member for Greenway, I am absolutely committed to making an investment in individuals,
an investment in organisations and an investment in the community for many years to come.