Maree Davenport

(Redirected from Maree Luckins)

Maree Therese Luckins Davenport (née Maree Therese Marley) is an Australian politician. She was a Liberal member of the Victorian Legislative Council from 1996 to 2002, representing Waverley Province as Maree Therese Luckins.

Maree Davenport
Member of the Victorian Legislative Council for Waverley Province
In office
30 March 1996 – 29 November 2002
Serving with Andrew Brideson
Succeeded byJohn Lenders
Personal details
Born
Maree Therese Marley

Melbourne, Victoria, Australia
Political partyLiberal Party
Spouses
Jeffrey Luckins
(m. 1990, divorced)
Marcus Davenport
(m. 2000)
Parent(s)Patrick James and Therese Mary Hamilton Marley
OccupationCEO, former politician

Early life and education edit

Maree Therese Marley[citation needed] was born in Melbourne, Victoria.[citation needed] Her parents are Patrick James and Therese Mary Hamilton Marley.[1]

Maree earned a Master of Leadership at Deakin University.[citation needed]

Politics edit

Davenport joined the Noble Park Young Liberal Party in 1986, and was active in the Young Liberals.[1]

Davenport was endorsed as the Liberal candidate for the seat of Dandenong North in 1991 and gained a swing of over 8 per cent, but was unsuccessful by 19 votes. She was Ministerial Advisor to Minister for Industry and Employment and Deputy Leader of the Liberal party Phil Gude from 1992 until 1996 when she was elected to the Victorian Legislative Council for Waverley Province at the age of 28. She was the youngest woman elected in Victoria (with an 18-month-old son) and the first to give birth (eldest daughter), while serving as a Member of Parliament.[citation needed]

From 1996 to 2002, she chaired the Liberal Party health policy committee and was later appointed Shadow Parliamentary Secretary for Human Services with responsibility for Health, Housing, Community Services and Aged Care. In addition, she was appointed to serve on the Consumer Affairs, Industry and Employment, Industrial Relations, Small Business, Multicultural Affairs and Women's Affairs Policy Committees and the Victorian Parliament's Joint all-party Scrutiny of Acts and Regulations Committee (SARC). She also served as chair of the Redundant Legislation Committee and Deputy Chair of the Regulation Review Committee.[citation needed]

She held the seat until 2002, when she unsuccessfully attempted to transfer to the Legislative Assembly seat of Narre Warren North following a redistribution of Waverley Province.[citation needed]

Davenport was the endorsed Liberal candidate in the seat of Mulgrave in 2018, standing against Daniel Andrews, however, was unsuccessful, blaming ‘leadership turmoil in the Coalition Federal Government’.[2]

Post-parliament edit

Davenport is CEO of Endometriosis Australia.[when?] She is also company director of advocacy firm Regs and Corporate Advisory Pty Ltd, trading as Government and Corporate Advisory Network[3] (was Phoenix Public Affairs) which she founded in 2004, specialising in peak bodies, consumer advocacy, NFP, housing, aged care, health, building and industry sectors. She is an accredited NMAS mediator and is a member of the Australian Institute of Company Directors, Governance Institute of Australia, Mediation Institute, Resolution Institute, Victorian Women's Trust, Women on Boards, and the National Association of Women in Construction.[citation needed]

She was chair and a non-executive director of Endometriosis Australia[citation needed] and Tradeswomen Australia.[citation needed] She is a member of Chief Executive Women.[citation needed]

Davenport chaired the Minister for Planning's Building Advisory Council from 2013 to 2019.[citation needed] She served as a member of the Building Appeals Board at the Victorian Building Authority from 2010 to 2013.[citation needed]

Personal life edit

In 1990 she married Jeffrey Luckins; they were later divorced.[citation needed]

In 2000 she married Marcus Davenport,[citation needed] who is as of April 2024 is a partner and foundation director at Clayton Utz Lawyers.[4][failed verification][better source needed]

References edit

  1. ^ a b "Luckins, Maree Therese". Re-Member: a database of all Victorian MPs since 1851. Parliament of Victoria. Archived from the original on 23 April 2023. Retrieved 22 January 2021.
  2. ^ "Labor clean sweep". 25 November 2018.
  3. ^ "MAREE DAVENPORT". Government and Corporate Advisory Network. Retrieved 22 January 2021.
  4. ^ "Marcus Davenport". Clayton Utz.