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Peter Malinauskas
MP
Peter Malinauskas (cropped).png
Malinauskas in 2018
47th Premier of South Australia
Elections: 2022
Assumed office
21 March 2022
Monarch Elizabeth II
Charles III
Governor Frances Adamson
Deputy Susan Close
Preceded by Steven Marshall
Leader of the South Australian Labor Party
Assumed office
9 April 2018
Deputy Susan Close
Preceded by Jay Weatherill
Leader of the Opposition in South Australia
In office
9 April 2018 – 21 March 2022
Premier Steven Marshall
Deputy Susan Close
Preceded by Steven Marshall
Succeeded by David Speirs
Minister for Health
In office
18 September 2017 – 18 March 2018
Premier Jay Weatherill
Preceded by Jack Snelling
Succeeded by Stephen Wade
Minister for Police, Emergency and Correctional Services
In office
19 January 2016 – 18 September 2017
Premier Jay Weatherill
Preceded by Tony Piccolo
Succeeded by Chris Picton
Member of the South Australian Parliament
for Croydon
Assumed office
17 March 2018
Preceded by Michael Atkinson
Member of the
South Australian Legislative Council
In office
1 December 2015 – 17 March 2018
Preceded by Bernard Finnigan
Personal details
Born
Peter Bryden Malinauskas

(1980-08-14) 14 August 1980 (age 44)
Adelaide, South Australia
Political party Australian Labor Party (SA)
Spouse Annabel West
Children 4
Alma mater University of Adelaide (BCom)

Peter Bryden Malinauskas (born 14 August 1980) is an Australian politician serving as the 47th and current premier of South Australia since 2022. He has been the leader of the South Australian branch of the Australian Labor Party (ALP) and a member of the House of Assembly (MHA) for the division of Croydon since 2018. He was previously the Leader of the Opposition from 2018 until his victory at the 2022 state election.

Malinauskas has been a Labor member of the South Australian House of Assembly since 2018, representing the electorate of Croydon. He was previously a member of the South Australian Legislative Council between 2015 and 2018.

Early life

Malinauskas was born in South Australia to Kathryn (Kate) née May and Peter Malinauskas Jr. on 14 August 1980. Malinauskas' paternal Hungarian grandmother Eta survived World War II and escaped the post-war communist Hungarian state when she emigrated to Bathurst in New South Wales. She married Peter Malinauskas Sr., a Lithuanian refugee, and the couple moved to Adelaide, later opening a fish and chip shop. Malinauskas' mother's forebears were middle-class Irish.

In his school years, Malinauskas' family resided in Colonel Light Gardens. Being from a Catholic family, Malinauskas was sent to Mercedes College where he displayed leadership potential in Australian rules football and cricket, as well as excelling in his studies. He was a member of the student representative council and was school captain in year 12. Mercedes College principal Peter Daw recalled Malinauskas as being "a future leader". Additionally, Daw recalled Malinauskas as being "one of those kids involved in lots of things" and a "popular lad" with a "magnetic personality that appealed to teachers and students alike".

Union figure

Malinauskas worked for Woolworths for seven years from 1995 at age 15, first as a trolley boy and later a checkout operator and night filler. He formed an early and enduring political relationship with Don Farrell through Woolworths workers' unionism. During his time at Woolworths, Malinauskas obtained a Bachelor of Commerce at the University of Adelaide. He became an influential union official who served from 2008 to 2015 as Secretary of the South Australian/Northern Territory branch of the Shop, Distributive and Allied Employees' Association (SDA), the major player in the dominant Labor Right faction of the South Australian branch of the Australian Labor Party. In August 2011, some media outlets claimed Malinauskas was the sole "faceless man" who informed Mike Rann he had lost the support of his party and to step down as premier of South Australia in favour of Jay Weatherill. Malinauskas was elected in July 2015 to Labor's National Executive at the party's National Conference.

Political views

Malinauskas is a member of the Labor Right faction. His views have been described as centrist.

..... I believe in the fair go but I get frustrated with left-wing ideology that focuses more on imposing equality than providing for equality of opportunity. This is why I'm passionate about Australian education − universal access to quality schooling gives everyone the chance to succeed".

Asked about nuclear power in South Australia, Malinauskas in 2014 said he was pro-nuclear despite Labor at the time remaining opposed to the establishment of a new nuclear waste repository or nuclear power plant in South Australia. Malinauskas stated "I believe climate change is a real challenge we need to face up to, and nuclear energy can be a safe source of baseload power, with zero carbon emissions" and "we should have a mature debate based on science and economics to determine if a nuclear industry is viable in South Australia". In March 2015 Labor initiated a Nuclear Fuel Cycle Royal Commission, and in 2016 launched a "Get to know nuclear" campaign to further explore the commission's findings. In October 2016 at the South Australian Labor party conference, Malinauskas spoke of the protesters who had gathered outside in opposition to the establishment of new nuclear waste storage facilities. He told delegates: "The difference between us and them, of course, is that we take very seriously our obligation to make sure that our ideology is underpinned by evidence."

Parliamentary career

Peter Malinauskas
Malinauskas in 2016

Following the parliamentary resignation of Bernard Finnigan on 12 November 2015, Malinauskas filled the Legislative Council casual vacancy in a joint sitting of the Parliament of South Australia on 1 December.

Premier Jay Weatherill indicated that Malinauskas could enter the Cabinet of South Australia in an early 2016 ministerial reshuffle, with reports of media speculation and internal party talk suggesting Malinauskas could potentially become the next Labor premier of South Australia, entering the House of Assembly through preselection as the next Labor candidate in Labor's safest lower house seat of Croydon with claims that incumbent Michael Atkinson "has long been willing to vacate his seat to Malinauskas if he ever wanted it". Atkinson announced in February 2017 that he would be retiring from parliament as of the 2018 election. Malinauskas confirmed he would be nominating for preselection.

.....

Malinauskas won the seat of Croydon at the 2018 election.

Leader of the Opposition, 2018–2022

Following the resignation of Jay Weatherill after the 2018 election, a caucus meeting on 9 April 2018 elected Malinauskas as Labor Leader. He consequently became Leader of the Opposition, with former Education Minister Susan Close as his deputy.

In April 2021, former Labor MP Annabel Digance and her husband were arrested and charged with attempting to blackmail Malinauskas. Police allege that the couple had threatened to make accusations against Malinauskas if he did not orchestrate Digance's return to politics by preselection for a safe seat or appointment to the Legislative Council or the Senate.

In January 2022, Malinauskas was diagnosed with COVID-19 and announced that he would isolate at home. He said his wife and three children had returned negative results. Grant Stevens, the South Australia Police Commissioner and State Coordinator during the COVID-19 pandemic in South Australia was also diagnosed on the same day. A few days later, Malinauskas reported that his wife and three children had also caught the virus. He had recovered and was back in the community on 13 January 2022.

Premier of South Australia 2022–present

In March 2022, Malinauskas led the party to victory at the state election, party after making healthcare a theme during the election. He was sworn in as premier of South Australia on 21 March 2022.

In May 2022, the government ended South Australia's state of emergency for the COVID-19 pandemic in South Australia, after 793 consecutive days.

Soon after the election, Malinauskas pledged to implement a state-based First Nations Voice to Parliament, as well as restarting treaty talks and greater investment in areas affecting Aboriginal South Australians. In July 2022 Dale Agius was appointed as the state's first Commissioner for First Nations Voice, with the role commencing in August. The South Australian state-based Voice was delayed until 2024, because of the 2023 Australian Indigenous Voice referendum. Elections took place on 16 March 2024, with Maher describing it as a successful election despite the low turnout, saying that it would take time to build awareness and engagement.

In April 2024, after a public outcry following the announcement that a developer was going to gut the historic Crown & Anchor pub, famed for its live music, and build high-rise student housing above its facade, Malinauskas intervened, placing the building was under provisional state heritage-listing to protect it until its heritage values could be fully assessed, a decision supported by opposition leader David Speirs.

Also in April 2024, Malinauskas intervened to launch a review panel to examine a plan to restructure the South Australian Museum which included cutting up to 27 research positions. He said that both the previous government and his government had made cuts to the museum's budget.

Ban from Russia

Following the 2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine, Malinauskas was listed among 121 Australians banned from entering Russia, possibly due to his Lithuanian background. He later joked that he was "grateful" to be included on the list.

Personal life

Malinauskas is married to Annabel West, a partner at a legal firm in Adelaide. The couple has two daughters and two sons.

See also

  • 2022 South Australian state election
  • Shadow ministry of Peter Malinauskas
  • Malinauskas ministry
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