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Jane Aagaard

The Honourable
Jane Aagaard
8th Speaker of the Northern Territory Legislative Assembly
In office
29 June 2005 – 23 October 2012
Preceded by Loraine Braham
Succeeded by Kezia Purick
Member of the Northern Territory Legislative Assembly
for Nightcliff
In office
18 August 2001 – 6 August 2012
Preceded by Stephen Hatton
Succeeded by Natasha Fyles
Personal details
Born 1956 (age 60–61)
Melbourne, Victoria
Nationality Australian
Political party Australian Labor Party
Children Zoe, Michael, Alex
Alma mater QUT
Occupation Public relations officer
Religion Uniting Church

Jane Lesley Aagaard (born 1956) is a former Australian politician. She was an Australian Labor Party member of the Northern Territory Legislative Assembly from 2001 to 2012, representing the Darwin-based electorate of Nightcliff. She was the Speaker of the Assembly from June 2005 until October 2012—to date, the only Labor member ever to hold the post. Prior to holding the speakership, she had served as Health Minister from 2001 to 2003.

Jane Aagaard was born in Melbourne, Victoria in 1956, to John Stuart McIntosh and Jean Brown. She moved to Brisbane, Queensland at the age of seven, where she was educated at Somerville House, a school for girls in South Brisbane.

In 1986, she accepted a position with the Northern Territory Department of Mines and Energy, and settled with her husband in Darwin.

Aagaard also became heavily involved in many aspects of the Darwin community. She helped found the Brolga Awards and Northern Territory Sports Awards, and continued organising both presentations for several years. Not long before entering parliament, she had also organised the city's commemoration of its bombing by Japanese forces during World War II.

When former Chief Minister Stephen Hatton, the longtime CLP member for Nightcliff, retired at the 2001 election, Aagaard ran as the Labor candidate against Hatton's son, Jason. In a shock result, Aagaard won the seat on an unexpectedly large swing of 11.7 percent that saw the previously marginal Nightcliff technically become a safe Labor seat. Aagaard's victory was part of a six-seat swing to Labor that saw the party win government for the first time ever, mainly on the strength of a strong performance in the Darwin area. She was reelected in 2005, picking up a healthy swing of 8.5 percent


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