1995 in Australia

The following lists events that happened during 1995 in Australia.

1995 in Australia
MonarchElizabeth II
Governor-GeneralBill Hayden
Prime ministerPaul Keating
Population17,071,758
ElectionsACT, NSW, QLD
List of events

  • 1994
  • 1993
  • 1992
1995
in
Australia

  • 1996
  • 1997
  • 1998
Decades:
  • 1970s
  • 1980s
  • 1990s
  • 2000s
  • 2010s
See also:

Incumbents

Bill Hayden
Paul Keating

State and territory leaders

Governors and administrators

Events

January

February

March

April

May

  • 9 May – The Federal Budget is delivered.[28] The Budget's enormous turnaround in projected revenue, from a deficit of $12.9 billion to a small surplus, is received with scepticism by many commentators.[28]
  • 30 MayDorothy Davis disappears.[29] Believed murdered, her remains had not been located as of 4 August 2016[update], when the man convicted of her murder dies.[30]

June

July

August

  • 2 August – A combined Queensland Opposition Coalition frontbench is announced, with Joan Sheldon as Deputy Leader and Shadow Treasurer.
  • 4 August – Federal Opposition Leader John Howard expels Noel Crichton-Browne from the Federal Liberal party room.[41]
  • 7 August – A second West Australian Federal MP, Allan Rocher leaves the Liberal Party to sit as an Independent, following the bitter power struggle in the West Australian branch.[42]
  • 16 August – New South Wales Premier Bob Carr concedes that his pre-election promise to lift the tolls on the M4 and M5 tollways in western Sydney would be abandoned as being impossibly expensive.[43]
  • 25 August – Labor's National Executive bans ALP members from associating with the right-wing Australian League of Rights.[44] When maverick Kalgoorlie MP Graeme Campbell persists in his association and espousal of anti-immigration views embarrassing to the party, his pre-selection is later revoked causing him to resign.[45]
  • 31 August – The cast bronze statue of the dog Larry La Trobe situated on the northern end of Melbourne's City Square is stolen.[46]
  • 1 to 31 August – Sydney's official Observatory Hill weather station records its driest and only rainless month since records began in 1859.[47] At the close of the month the city had gone 46 days without measurable rain, twelve more than the previous record from 1970 and 1975.[48]

September

October

  • 11 October – John Fahey is selected as Liberal candidate for the marginal seat of Macarthur.[51]
  • 19 October – South Australian Democrat and former leader Senator John Coulter resigns due to ill health, warning Cheryl Kernot that the party risked losing votes by becoming too mainstream.[52] Coulter is replaced by former student activist and party worker Natasha Stott Despoja who is sworn in on November 30.[53]
  • 20 OctoberBrenda Hodge, the last person to be sentenced to death in Australia before the full abolition of capital punishment, is paroled from prison after serving eleven years of a life sentence.[citation needed]
  • 24 October – Anna Wood, a 15-year-old schoolgirl from Sydney, dies after taking ecstasy at a rave.[54] Her death sparks a media firestorm and a national debate over the use of illicit drugs.[55]

November

  • November – The rabbit calicivirus disease (RCD) escapes from an island testing station in South Australia & quickly spreads into Victoria and New South Wales.[56][57] It is estimated that the feral rabbit population would be permanently reduced by 60%.
  • 1 November – Federal Opposition Leader John Howard attempts to mend relations with the Asian community, telling Chinese business people in Melbourne how he values their commercial networks.[58]
  • 3 November- After a six-month trial, David Harold Eastman is convicted by a jury of the assassination of Australian Federal Police Assistant Commissioner Colin Winchester.[59] He is sentenced to life imprisonment and can only be released by approval of the ACT parliament, Federal Parliament and the Governor-General.[59]
  • 7 November – The Federal Court of Australia rules against Minister Tickner's ban on the building of a bridge to Hindmarsh Island in South Australia.[citation needed]
  • 14 November – Commissioner Marks delivers his final report, damning Carmen Lawrence's role in the Easton affair, the weight of her colleagues' evidence being against her version.[citation needed]
  • 15 November – Legislation decriminalising owning or working in a brothel is passed by the New South Wales Legislative Council, thereby fulfilling the recommendations of the Wood police corruption inquiry.[60]
  • 26 November – The Australian Women's Party is launched in Brisbane, Queensland by a group which includes disenchanted Labor women.[citation needed]

December

Arts and literature

Film

Television

Sport

Births

January

February

March

April

  • 4 April – Jacob Melling, soccer player
  • 8 April – Hagi Gligor, footballer
  • 11 April – Sarah Mason, New Zealand-born surfer
  • 12 April – Angela Donald, artistic gymnast
  • 21 April – Matt Crouch, footballer
  • 25 April – Scott Galloway, footballer
  • 27 April – Nick Kyrgios, tennis player

May

June

July

August

  • 14 August – Montaigne, singer
  • 19 August – Dylan Phythian, rugby league player

September

October

November

December

Deaths

See also

References

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  120. ^ "Poet Gwen Harwood dies at 75". The Sydney Morning Herald. 9 December 1995. p. 8. Archived from the original on 9 July 2024. Retrieved 9 July 2024.
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