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March 8, 2014
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1 Introduction
Peter Wong (politician)

Wikipedia

 
Dr Peter Wong is an Australian politician. A prominent figure in the Sydney Chinese community and former member of the Liberal Party of Australia, he became concerned over the Liberal Party's refusal to strongly oppose the rise of Pauline Hanson and her One Nation Party, and ultimately went on to found the Unity Party (Australia)|Unity Party. He served as their leader from 1998 to 1999 and has represented the party in the New South Wales Legislative Council since 1999.




Wong was born in China, but his family fled the Communist regime when he was eight. His family briefly settled in Borneo, where his father provided free medical care to the poor, but they later moved on to Sydney, Australia. Wong ultimately studied medicine at the University of Sydney and went into private practice, working as a general practitioner in Sydney for many years. He became actively involved in the Chinese Australians|Chinese Australian community, which saw him appointed as a member of the Ethnic Affairs Commission from 1991 to 1997.

Wong became extensively involved in community work; amongst other things, he founded the Chinese Catholic Community, co-founded the Chinese Charity Foundation and served as chair of the Chinese Migrant Welfare Association. He also co-founded the Welfare Committee for Chinese Students in 1990 and through it played a role in the Bob Hawke|Hawke government's eventual decision to give asylum to 42,000 Chinese university students after the Tiananmen Square protests of 1989|Tiananmen Square massacre. Through his work with these organisations, Wong often oversaw the provision of assistance to newly arrived migrants and the underprivileged in the Sydney Chinese community and acted as a spokesperson for the community in the media.




Wong was an active member of the Liberal Party of Australia for many years. He served as secretary of the party's Chinatown branch, acted as an advisor to Philip Ruddock and was a prominent supporter of federal MP Brendan Nelson and prominent candidate for List of Mayors and Lord Mayors of Sydney|Lord Mayor of Sydney Kathryn Greiner. However, after the Australian legislative election, 1996|1996 federal election and Queensland legislative election, 1998|1998 Queensland state election, Wong became increasingly concerned about the rising popularity of controversial right-wing federal MP Pauline Hanson and her One Nation Party, who had run on a platform of reducing Asian immigration. When the Liberal Party did little to stop the growth of the Hanson movement and made clear their intention to preference One Nation over the opposition Australian Labor Party, Wong made his concern public, though he kept it relatively muted.

When the Liberal Party continued to insist on preferencing Hanson, Wong joined a number of conservative Chinese community leaders in campaigning against the preference decision, both through the party machine and the media. As the election drew closer, it became clear that these tactics were not working, and a disgruntled Wong began to look at other alternatives. On June 24, Wong resigned from the Liberal Party with a statement angrily criticising the party's refusal to seriously tackle Hanson. His comments received some media attention, which was reinforced when Helen Sham-Ho, a Chinese Australian Liberal member of the New South Wales Legislative Council, resigned from the party for similar reasons only days later.




With the Australian legislative election, 1998|1998 election looming on the horizon, Wong initially planned to stand as an independent candidate. However, he was persuaded to look at starting a separate political party with the specific aim of opposing Hanson and promoting multiculturalism. Weeks of discussions with other ethnic leaders around the nation followed, and the result, the result, the Unity Party (Australia)|Unity Party, was announced on July 3, 1998, with Wong as its first convener - in effect, leader.

Wong quickly set about finding candidates and members, as well as setting up branches in other states, and the new party saw rapid growth. He was particularly insistent that the new party must be multicultural, instead of representing one or two ethnic groups, and broke with Sham-Ho over the issue. For this reason, it was initially intended to find a non-Asian leader to broaden the party's appeal in advance of the Australian legislative election, 1998|1998 federal election, but this never occurred, and Wong led the party into the election. While the Unity Party was notably liberal on race issues, Wong's conservatism was evident in their policies against abortion and euthanasia|voluntary euthanasia.

Wong chose not to run for office himself at the federal election, but the party fielded candidates in 72 of the 148 electorates. They fell well short of having any members elected, but had outpolled the Australian Democrats and Australian Greens in some lower house seats - although their main Senate ticket was nearly outpolled by the Christian Democratic Party (Australia)|Christian Democratic Party in primary votes. With the election over, Wong and the Unity Party then turned their attention to the New South Wales legislative election, 1999|1999 New South Wales state election, where the party had a greater chance of gaining representation in parliament, as their core base lay in the state.




While he had not contested the federal election, Wong decided to run for the New South Wales Legislative Council at the state election, and took first place on the Unity Party ticket. With the threat from Pauline Hanson and One Nation largely gone, much of their original focus had changed, but Wong oversaw a change in party policy, focusing more on issues of multiculturalism and social justice. Wong's campaign gained significant publicity in Chinese-language newspapers and was often quoted in the mainstream media during the campaign.

However, only weeks before the election, a string of founding members resigned over Wong's decision to preference several right-wing parties despite having done little consultation with other members, and many of them also demanded that Wong resign as leader. This caused significant fallout for Wong and the Unity Party, and he subsequently polled only 1% of the vote on election day. Despite this, he still managed to win a seat in the Legislative Council, as due to an unusual effect of the electoral system, he managed to pick up a solid flow of preferences from other parties, several of whom were ideologically opposed to the Unity Party.

His election with such a low proportion of the vote - along with two others who gained less than 3% - caused some controversy and sparked a major overhaul of the state's electoral laws. He soon resigned as leader of the Unity Party in order to concentrate on his parliamentary responsibilities, and while he remained actively involved in the party, subsequently had little to do with their affairs outside of New South Wales.




As a member of the Legislative Council, Wong has generally tended to concentrate on ethnic and migrant issues. He has attempted to minimise the influence of One Nation-turned-independent MLC David Oldfield, who has tried to argue for the elimination of all forms of government support for multiculturalism. He has often been a spokesperson for the Chinese community in parliament, most often during an organised crime war involving Sydney's Chinatown in 2003 and during a government attempt to regulate the use of MSG in restaurants, which Wong successfully lobbied against after a wave of concern from Chinese restaurants.

Wong has been sharply critical of policies he views as being anti-migrant, as seen when he strongly opposed the Bob Carr|Carr government's decision to change the name of the Ethnic Affairs Commission to the Community Relations Commission - a move which he blamed on appeasing Pauline Hanson's supporters. He has also attacked examples of what he perceives to be racist stereotyping, such as Premier of New South Wales|Premier Bob Carr's introduction of racial profiling in 2003, and comments by Carr that he blamed for inciting aggression against ethnic minorities in the wake of the Sydney gang rapes and a spate of other incidents involving gang-related crime. While Wong's stance in that particular incidence gained significant publicity, it earned him some criticism, with The Daily Telegraph in particular arguing that he had misrepresented Carr and suggesting that Wong had attempted to make political points out of the crime situation.

While Wong had been known as a conservative when he was in the Liberal Party, he has often espoused traditionally left-wing viewpoints in the Legislative Council. He voted to lower the age of consent for gay men, opposed the mandatory detention of refugees, often visiting detainees in Villawood Detention Centre and came out strongly against the 2003 invasion of Iraq. He has also been a vocal defender of the Palestine|Palestinian people; a stance that caused Wong some controversy when Alan Jacobs, the Unity Party's national president, resigned and stormed out on the party after hearing him make anti-Israel comments in the Legislative Council. Jacobs also repeatedly accused Wong of being homophobia|homophobic, though he provided no evidence of this. Voluntary euthanasia has been the only marked exception to his otherwise generally liberal voting record; he is strongly opposed to it, and vocally campaigned against a failed attempt by the Greens New South Wales|Greens to legalise voluntary euthanasia in New South Wales.

Wong has become increasingly less vocal as his term has continued; while he was often seen in the newspapers through 2003, he has very rarely been heard in the press since the beginning of 2004. In December 2003, a survey by the The Sun-Herald newspaper placed Wong among the four worst parliamentary performers in the Legislative Council, in terms of his activity during the previous session of parliament. Wong's eight-year term expires in 2007, and he has not yet made any statement as to whether he intends to recontest his seat.

Category:Australian politicians|Wong, Peter
category:Overseas Chinese politicians|Wong, Peter

This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Peter Wong (politician)".


Last Modified:   2005-11-07


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