Woodruff Shadow Ministry

Tasmanian Greens have not been in the official Opposition position since 2010,[1] The party appoint their parliamentary members to various portfolios to shadow the Government's actions and plans. The current leader is Rosalie Woodruff.

Tasmanian Greens Shadow Ministry
Cabinet of Tasmania
Rosalie Woodruff, Leader of the Tasmanian Greens
Logo of the Tasmanian Greens
Date formed23/04/2024
People and organisations
GovernorBarbara Baker
Total no. of members5
Member partyTasmanian Greens
Status in legislatureCrossbench
Opposition partiesGovernment - Liberals'
Opposition - Labor
Opposition leadersLiberal - Jeremy Rockliff
Labor - Dean Winter
History
Outgoing election2024 Tasmanian state election

Woodruff Shadow Ministry edit

The Ministry:[2]

Party Ministry Member Portrait Portfolio Notes
Greens Rosalie Woodruff   Greens Leader
Aboriginal Affairs
Attorney-General
Justice and Integrity
Commission of Inquiry Response
Climate Change and Forests
LGBTIQA+
Animal Welfare
Marine Environment
Leader since 2023, MP for Franklin
Greens Vica Bayley   Greens Deputy Leader
Leader of Greens Business
Treasury and Finance
Energy
Environment and Biodiversity
Education
Housing and Consumer Protection
Sport and Events
Veterans Affairs
Arts
Deputy Leader since 2023, MP for Clark
Greens Helen Burnet   Preventative Health and Community Wellbeing
Local Government
Planning
Infrastructure
Transport
Water
Workplace Relations and Safety
Multicultural Affairs
Waste
Deputy Mayor of Hobart <2024, MP for Clark
Greens Cecily Rosol   Health and Mental Wellbeing
Children and Young People
Corrections and Rehabilitation
Community Service
Heritage
Trade and Economic Development
Disability Services
Women
MP for Bass
Greens Tabatha Badger   Primary Industries
Police, Fire and Emergency Management
Parks and Public Land
Skills and Training
Tourism and Hospitality
Prevention of Family Violence
Small Business
Science and Information Technology
Mining

References edit

  1. ^ McCall, Tony (2013-11-06). "Will the Labor-Green alliance in Tasmania end in tears?". The Conversation. Retrieved 2024-04-23.
  2. ^ MPs, Tasmanian Greens. "Tabatha Badger". tasgreensmps.org/. Retrieved 2024-04-23.