Anna Bligh Net Worth 2023, Age, Husband, Children, Height, Family, Parents, Salary

Anna Bligh net worth

How much is Anna Bligh worth? Read about Anna Bligh net worth, age, husband, children, height, family, parents, salary and party as well as other information you need to know.

Introduction

Anna Bligh is a lobbyist and former Australian politician who served as the 37th Premier of Queensland, in office from 2007 to 2012 as leader of the Labor Party. She was the first woman to hold either position. In 2017, she was appointed CEO of the Australian Banking Association. Before entering politics she worked for various community organizations. Bligh entered the Queensland Legislative Assembly at the 1995 state election, winning the seat of South Brisbane.

Bligh was promoted to the ministry in 1998, under Peter Beattie, and became deputy premier in 2005 and state treasurer in 2006. Bligh succeeded Beattie as premier in 2007 – Queensland’s first female premier and Australia’s third. She led Labor to victory at the 2009 state election, but at the 2012 election suffered a landslide defeat and announced her retirement from politics. From 2010 to 2011, Bligh was the National President of the Austr alian Labor Party.

Early life

NameAnna Bligh
Net Worth$5 million
OccupationFormer politician
Age62 years
Height1.68m
Anna Bligh net worth

Anna Maria Bligh AC was born on July 14, 1960 (age 62 years) in Warwick, Queensland, Australia. She is a descendant of William Bligh, who is famous for the Mutiny on the Bounty and is the 4th Governor of New South Wales. Bligh grew up on the Gold Coast. Her parents separated when she was 13. She attended Catholic schools until Year 9 and considered becoming a nun. One of her aunts became a nun and another had entered a convent. However, the church’s attitude towards divorced people (her mother was no longer permitted to take Communion) reportedly estranged her and her mother from the church.

Bligh gained a Bachelor of Arts at the University of Queensland. She traces her politicization to her first year at University, observing a right-to-march rally in King George Square where people were being hit over the head by the police. Bligh’s first involvement in activism was student protests against Vice-Chancellor Brian Wilson’s controversial administrative restructuring within the university. She then went on to be involved in the Women’s Rights Collective which campaigned for legalized abortion against the anti-abortion policies of the Bjelke-Petersen government.

Her next role was as Women’s vice president of the Student Union. She then ran an election ticket called EAT (Education Action Team) in an unsuccessful bid to oust the faction in charge, headed by the future Goss government identity David Barbagallo. Law student Paul Lucas, Bligh’s future deputy premier, was a part of Barbagallo’s team. Her 1982 team included the former Minister for Education, Training and the Arts Rod Welford. Anne Warner, who was a future Minister in the Goss Government, was an officeholder at the time in the Union. Warner soon becomes one of Bligh’s key political mentors.

Anna Bligh subsequently worked in a number of community organizations, including child care services, neighborhood centres, women’s refuges and trade unions as well as in the Queensland Public Service. Bligh was the secretary of the Labor Party’s Fairfield branch in 1987. Bligh holds Honorary Doctorates from the University of Queensland and Griffith University. 

Political career

Anna Bligh was first elected to parliament at the 1995 election to the safe Labor seat of South Brisbane, succeeding Anne Warner. A member of the Socialist Left faction of the Labor Party, she was promoted to the ministry following the election of the Beattie government in 1998 as Minister for Families, Youth and Community Care and Disability Services.

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Bligh became Queensland’s first female Education Minister in 2001. She assumed additional responsibility for the Arts portfolio in 2004. As Education Minister, Bligh introduced a number of reforms, including a universally available Prep year in every Queensland Primary school, which added a thirteenth year of education and brought Queensland schooling into line with other Australian States for the first time.
She lifted the entry age of schooling, while also transforming early childhood education which led to an increase in kindergarten programs from 28% of 3-4-year-olds to 94%. Bligh also oversaw the introduction of “Earning or Learning” laws, requiring all young people aged 15 to 17 to be enrolled in school or in full-time work – effectively lifting the school leaving age from 15 to 17 – the first such laws in Australia.

In July 2005, the retirement of Deputy Premier and Treasurer Terry Mackenroth forced a cabinet reshuffle, which saw Bligh promoted to the office of Deputy Premier and Minister for Finance, State Development, Trade and Innovation. Bligh’s appointment as Deputy Premier coincided with her election to parliament ten years earlier. In early February 2006, Bligh also gained the Treasury portfolio after Beattie relinquished the responsibility to focus on attempting to fix the state’s troubled health system.

Anna Bligh had long been touted as a likely successor to the long-running Premier Peter Beattie, and he publicly endorsed her as his replacement when he announced his retirement from politics on 10 September 2007. She was subsequently nominated unopposed by the Labor caucus in a deal that saw Paul Lucas from the Right faction succeed her as Deputy Premier.

Bligh became the leader of the Labor Party on 12 September. After Beattie formally resigned on 13 September 2007, Bligh was sworn in by then Governor Quentin Bryce. Bligh led Labor to victory in the 2009 state election. Bligh lost eight seats from the large majority she’d inherited from Beattie, and also suffered an eight-percent swing on the two-party vote. Nonetheless, due largely to taking 34 out of 40 seats in Brisbane, Labor still won 51 seats out of 89, enough for a comfortable majority. The election marked the Queensland ALP’s eighth consecutive election win; the party has been in government for all but two years since 1989.

In winning the election, Bligh became Australia’s first popularly elected female premier. The two previous female premiers, Carmen Lawrence (Western Australia 1990–93) and Joan Kirner (Victoria 1990–92) became premiers following the resignation of male premiers (as Bligh did), but both were defeated at the following respective state elections. However, Bligh is not Australia’s first popularly elected female head of government. Rosemary Follett and Kate Carnell were both popularly elected as Chief Minister of the Australian Capital Territory, and Clare Martin was elected as Chief Minister of the Northern Territory.

In 2009, Anna Bligh was elected to the three-person presidential team of the Australian Labor Party, to serve until July 2012. She served as National President of the Australian Labor Party for the 2010–11 financial year. Anna Bligh’s leadership came to national and international attention in 2011 as she led the response and recovery effort to devastating natural disasters – a series of catastrophic floods across 78% of Queensland, including Brisbane – followed by a category 5 cyclone. In an emotion-charged speech during a media conference at the height of the crisis, Bligh rallied the state, declaring, “We are Queenslanders. We’re the people that they breed tough, north of the border.”

Anna Bligh led a major reconstruction program, including a legislated Reconstruction Authority administering a $6bn rebuilding budget. More than 3,000 workers were to be offered voluntary redundancies, just three months after the privatisation of QR National. Queensland Motorways Limited and Forestry Plantations Queensland were not being sold, but rather being leased for an estimated 50-year lease. Since this announcement, the Queensland Government announced plans to sell Queensland Rail to the public.

Revenues from privatization were estimated at $15 billion, to go towards balancing Queensland’s state budget. The sale of these assets aimed at removing significant overheads from the Queensland government’s debt portfolio, allowing further growth of the government’s capital assets, as well as aiding the government to return to its AAA credit rating. Bligh faced resistance from both within her party and the trade union movement, but defended her privatization plan as ‘not negotiable’.

The 2009 annual state conference of the Australian Labor Party – Queensland Branch, passed a motion, moved by then Treasurer Andrew Fraser MP, seconded by Parliamentary Secretary for Healthy Living Murray Watt MP, supporting the sale of the assets, recognising that the sale would allow the Queensland Government to grow its asset portfolio, and retire debt.

Anna Bligh’s management of and performance during the 2010–11 Queensland floods was widely approved. Labor had been well behind the LNP, led by John-Paul Langbroek, for most of the time since the fall of 2010. However, the following Newspoll saw a record turnaround in Bligh and Labor’s fortunes. Labor rose from a two-party deficit of 41–59 to a lead of 52–48, with Bligh’s personal satisfaction-dissatisfaction standing going from a negative 24–67 to a positive 49–43.

Bligh’s recovery in the polls was a factor behind Langbroek being forced to stand down in favour of Brisbane Lord Mayor Campbell Newman. Newman had become a national figure during the floods, and polling showed he was the only non-Labor politician who even came close to matching Bligh’s popularity during that time. However, Newman was not a member of parliament, and a by-election could not be arranged to allow him to get a seat in the chamber. For this reason, Jeff Seeney was elected as interim parliamentary leader of the LNP while Newman led the LNP’s election team and simultaneously contested the Labor-held seat of Ashgrove.

She harshly criticized Newman’s move, saying it was irresponsible for Newman to “cut and run” from his post as Lord Mayor while Queensland was still rebuilding. She also hinted that she might call an election a year before it was due. She had previously promised not to call an election for 2011 to focus on recovery, but was concerned that the unorthodox leadership arrangement on the opposition side could make the cooperation necessary for the recovery effort impossible.

On 25 January, Anna Bligh announced an election for 24 March. It was the first time in Queensland history that the voters knew the election date in advance of the parliament being dissolved. Bligh made this decision after learning that the Commission of Inquiry into the 2010–11 Queensland floods would not release its final report until 16 March, rather than the middle of February as originally planned. She wanted Queenslanders to see the report before they went to the polls.

Anna Bligh asked Governor Penny Wensley to dissolve parliament on 19 February, formally beginning the 35-day campaign. She began the race as an underdog; the LNP had regained a substantial lead in polling since Newman took the lead. Bligh was dogged throughout the campaign by the perception that she’d misled voters about the asset sales. With Labor sinking in the polls, Bligh conceded in a 13 March interview with the Brisbane Times that in all likelihood, Labor would not be re-elected. The final Newspoll of the campaign appeared to confirm this, showing Labor’s support had sunk to only 39.2 percent.

At 24 March election, Labor suffered one of the largest electoral wipeouts in Australian history, and the worst defeat that a sitting government in Queensland has ever suffered, double the previous record-holder of the 1989 election. Labor was reduced from 51 seats to seven, suffering a swing of more than 15 points. This was largely because of a near-total meltdown in Brisbane, which had been Labor’s power base for over two decades. The party lost all but three of its seats in the capital, in some cases suffering swings of over 10 percent. Bligh herself suffered a 9-point swing in South Brisbane, and she only overcame her LNP challenger on Green preferences. Ten members of her cabinet were defeated. It was only the sixth time since 1915 that Queenslanders have thrown a government from office in an election.

The next day, with Labor’s defeat beyond doubt, Bligh announced she was retiring from politics. She had intended to stay in parliament but said that the severity of Labor’s defeat made her realize the party could not “develop an effective opposition” with her even as a backbencher. She resigned as both premier and state Labor leader that day, and handed her resignation to Wensley the same afternoon, to take effect from 30 March 2012. Bligh had intended that the timing of her resignation would allow a by-election to be held on 28 April 2012, the same day as local government elections.

Anna Bligh was ultimately succeeded as state Labor leader by her Transport Minister, Annastacia Palaszczuk. Later reports suggested that Anna Bligh would not be able to formally resign from Parliament until the writ of election for South Brisbane was returned, meaning that a by-election would be too late to coincide with the Brisbane City Council election. But on 2 April, she was declared the winner, and a writ was subsequently issued for the by-election.

Bligh was appointed CEO of YWCA New South Wales in 2014, a not-for-profit organization striving to end domestic violence and build a safer world for women and children. In 2017, she was made CEO of the Australian Banking Association. As CEO, Bligh led the industry’s response to the Royal Commission into Misconduct in the Banking, Superannuation and Financial Services Industry, setting out to strengthen bank culture and rebuild trust. When the Royal Commission interim report was released, Bligh described it as a “day of shame” for the industry and vowed to do “whatever it takes” to regain trust and move the industry from a selling culture to a service culture.

She oversaw the development of an updated Banking Code of Practice and worked with the industry to deliver significant reform. In 2020, Bligh led the banking sector’s response to COVID-19. For the first time, Australian banks agreed to a unified response to assist customers experiencing hardship as a result of the pandemic. Banks agreed to pause loan repayments on almost one million mortgage and business loans for at least six months. The ABA also worked with regulators to ensure that deferred loans would not affect a customer’s credit rating. Bligh described the loan deferrals as “a multi-billion dollar lifeline” for customers.

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Anna Bligh announced on June 8, 2013, that she had been diagnosed with non-Hodgkin lymphoma. Bligh’s memoir, “Through The Wall”, was published in April 2015. In 2017 Bligh was appointed a Companion of the Order of Australia for eminent service to the Parliament of Queensland, particularly as Premier, to infrastructure development and education reform, as an advocate for the role of women in public life, and to the not-for-profit sector. She is a non-executive director of Medibank Private and a board member of the International Banking Federation (IBFed).

Husband

Anna Bligh is married to her husband Greg Withers, they had their wedding in 2005. Anna and her husband Greg had their marriage ceremony in Sydney. She has two children Joe Frances and Oliver Frances.

Anna Bligh net worth

What is Anna Bligh worth? Anna Bligh net worth is estimated at around $5 million. Her main source of income is from her primary work as a former politician. Anna Bligh’s salary per month and other career earnings are over $350,000 dollars annually. Her remarkable achievements have earned her some luxurious lifestyles and some fancy car trips. She is one of the richest and most influential former politicians in Australia. Anna Bligh stands at an appealing height of 1.68m and has a good body weight which suits her personality.