Bridget McKenzie Net Worth 2022, Age, Husband, Children, Height, Family, Simon Benson

Bridget McKenzie net worth

Read the complete write-up of Bridget McKenzie net worth, age, husband, children, height, family, parents, party as well as other information you need to know.

Introduction

Bridget McKenzie is an Australian politician. She is a member of the National Party and has been a Senator for Victoria since 2011. She has held ministerial office in the Turnbull and Morrison Governments, also serving as the party’s Senate leader since 2019. She worked as a schoolteacher and university lecturer before entering politics. She was elected to the Senate in the 2010 federal election and served as a whip from 2011 to 2013.

McKenzie replaced Fiona Nash as deputy leader of the Nationals during the 2017 parliamentary eligibility crisis, and as a result, was elevated to the cabinet. She served variously as Minister for Rural Health (2017–2018), Sport (2017–2018), Regional Communications (2017–2018), Regional Services, Local Government and Decentralisation (2018–2019), and Agriculture (2019–2020).

She resigned from cabinet and as deputy leader in 2020 as a result of a scandal surrounding the administration of community sporting grants. She was reappointed to the cabinet in 2021 following a Nationals leadership spill as Minister for Emergency Management and National Recovery and Resilience and Minister for Regionalisation, Regional Communications and Regional Education.

Early life

NameBridget McKenzie
Net Worth$4 million
OccupationPolitician
Height1.68m
Age52 years
Bridget McKenzie net worth 2022

Bridget McKenzie was born on December 27, 1969 (age 52 years) in Alexandra, Victoria, Australia. She grew up in Benalla, where her mother was a primary school teacher and her father was a dairyman. She attended Tintern Grammar, where she was a house captain and swimming captain. After starting a family, McKenzie began studying at Deakin University as a mature-age student, completing a double degree in applied science (specializing in human movement) and teaching (specializing in mathematics).

McKenzie served as the president of the Deakin University Student Association in 2003. Bridget McKenzie subsequently taught physical education and mathematics for several years at Yarram Secondary College, Gippsland. She later lectured in education at Monash University.

Political career

Bridget McKenzie joined the National Party at the age of 18 and was a junior vice-president of the Victorian branch from 2006 to 2009. She first stood for parliament at the 2004 federal election, unsuccessfully standing for the House of Representatives in the Division of McMillan. At the 2010 election, McKenzie was elected to the Senate in the third place on a joint Coalition ticket. Her term began on 1 July 2011.

McKenzie was her party’s Senate whip from September 2013 to June 2014. She was elected deputy leader to Barnaby Joyce in December 2017, replacing Fiona Nash after her disqualification from parliament due to dual citizenship. Under the terms of the Coalition Agreement with the Liberals, McKenzie was elevated to cabinet as Minister for Sport, Minister for Rural Health, and Minister for Regional Communications.

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She was appointed Minister for Regional Services, Decentralisation and Local Government when Scott Morrison became prime minister in August 2018. She also retained the sports portfolio. After the Coalition retained an office at the 2019 election, she was appointed Minister for Agriculture, the first woman to hold the position.

McKenzie is a shooting enthusiast and is chair of the Parliamentary Friends of Shooting. She is opposed to same-sex marriage and publicly campaigned for the “No” vote in the Australian Marriage Law Postal Survey. McKenzie’s gay younger brother confronted her on her views in a letter to the Bendigo Advertiser and on the panel discussion program Q&A.

As Agriculture Minister McKenzie was instrumental in protecting Australia’s pork industry from African Swine Fever. On 11 December 2019 McKenzie announced $66.6 million to boost Australia’s defenses against the virus which has a high mortality rate in domestic pigs. Australia’s ASF Response Package saw 130 more frontline biosecurity officers deployed from January 2020 to do half a million more passenger screenings a year; Six new detector dogs deployed at airports and mail centres and two new 3D x-ray machines at Melbourne and Sydney mail centres. Biosecurity officers were given a new capability to issue infringement notices on the spot at airports.

On 12 September 2019, the Australian Senate passed the Criminal Code Amendment (Agricultural Protection) Bill 2019 which introduced new offenses for the incitement of trespass, property damage, or theft on agricultural land. McKenzie said the Bill sent a clear message that animal activists who use the personal information of farmers to incite trespass risked jail. “Australians expect the farmers who feed and clothe us – and many millions around the world – should not be harassed, or worse, as they go about their work.

The time has come for activists to understand that you can’t just descend on someone’s place of work and home, interfere with their business and steal their animals—and think that you can get away with it. When protests become acts of trespass and theft, you’re not a protestor, you’re a criminal and deserve to be punished.” Australia’s peak agricultural body the National Farmers Federation welcomed the new laws and said the Bill sent a clear signal to anti-farming activists that the invasion of farms and harassment of farmers, their families and workers, running lawful businesses, would not be tolerated.

In December 2019 Bridget McKenzie announced Australia’s first national Mandatory Dairy Industry Code of Conduct. A Mandatory Dairy Code was a key recommendation of the Australian Competition and Consumer Commission’s 2018 Dairy Inquiry and its introduction was welcomed by the ACCC and greeted with almost universal approval from farmer bodies. Among provisions of the code unveiled by Minister McKenzie included were that: All parties must deal with each other fairly and in good faith; Bans retrospective step-downs; stop processors from making unilateral changes to agreements; Bans processors from withholding royalty payments to farmers if a farmer switches processors; and Introduces a dispute resolution process for matters arising under or in connection with agreements.

During a historic address to the Australian National Press Club on 20 March 2019 broadcast from her hometown of Wodonga when the Minister for Regional Services, Sport, Local Government and Decentralisation, McKenzie announced a pilot Regional Deal for Albury Wodonga. It was the first cross-border deal, involving state and local governments from NSW and Victoria, ever made and aimed to harmonize some of the regulatory barriers faced by these two cities to drive more growth and productivity locally.

The federal, NSW and Victorian governments and Albury and Wodonga councils agreed to sign the statement of intent on 6 July 2020. Hers was the first time the nationally broadcast address was hosted outside a capital city, and McKenzie used the occasion to focus on the opportunity regional Australia offered for national economic growth, saying regional Australia was a place of opportunity with unlimited potential.

Sports rorts affair

Bridget McKenzie was widely accused of pork-barrelling in January 2020 after the release of a report by the Commonwealth auditor-general which found that a $100 million sports grant program she oversaw in the lead-up to the 2019 Australian federal election was administered in a way that “was not informed by an appropriate assessment process and sound advice”. The auditor general’s report noted that it was not clear what the legal authority for the particular allocation of grants was.

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In a submission to a Senate Select Committee on Administration of Sports Grants, McKenzie stood by her Ministerial discretion which “saw grants distributed more evenly by state, region, sport, organization type and funding stream than if the recommendations of Sport Australia or the methodology seemingly favoured by the Auditor-General were adopted”. McKenzie’s submission further confirmed Ministerial discretion saw 27 percent more successful in ‘marginal’ and ‘targeted’ seats but 39 percent more successful in all the other electorates.

A disproportionately high percentage of funds were allocated to sporting clubs in marginal Coalition electorates. One Adelaide rugby union club was awarded a $500,000 grant under the scheme for new female change rooms, despite not fielding a women’s team since 2018 when it was embroiled in a sexism controversy. The club, located in the marginal Coalition-held seat of Sturt, was awarded the scheme’s maximum available grant just weeks before the election.

A football club in the marginally held Coalition seat of Brisbane was given $150,000 for a project that had already been funded. More than $1 million in grants were allocated to sports clubs with links to clubs Coalition MPs as members or patrons: three linked to Indigenous affairs minister Ken Wyatt, one tied to the treasurer and deputy Liberal leader Josh Frydenberg, and two associated with senator Sarah Henderson. Nationals leader Michael McCormack’s son’s football club in the NSW Riverina also received a $147,000 grant under the program. In some cases, the funds were presented as oversized novelty cheques by the Liberal candidate for the seat in question, rather than by the sitting member.

Item 38 of McKenzie’s submission showed the Auditor-General’s process for funding according to rank would have seen 30 Coalition electorates receive nearly half of all funding and 22 electorates, including 14 Labor-held electorates, would have received no money, while item 46 showed Sport Australia’s recommendations would have seen 30 electorates receive no grants. Ministerial discretion reduced this to five electorates and three of them had no applications submitted.

Calls for resignation

The Opposition called for McKenzie to resign from the federal ministry because of the bias in the funding allocated. She maintained that “no project that received funding was not eligible to receive it” and that “no rules were broken in this program”. The Leader of the Opposition Anthony Albanese stated that what McKenzie had done “fails every test” and she must be sacked.

In 1993, Ros Kelly, the Labor Sports Minister in the Keating government resigned under almost identical circumstances in what came to be known as the Sports Rorts affair. More than 70 percent of Australian Financial Review readers said that McKenzie should resign over the scandal.

Government response

The government steadfastly supported McKenzie throughout the scandal. Prime Minister Scott Morrison, Michael McCormack, Peter Dutton and other high-profile Coalition ministers repeatedly spoke out in her defense. Following the revelation that McKenzie awarded a $36,000 grant to a regional Victorian shooting club without declaring that she was a member, on 22 January 2020 Morrison referred the matter to the Commonwealth Auditor-General and the Secretary of the Department of the Prime Minister and Cabinet for advice in relation to the conduct of ministerial standards.

On 29 January, Morrison attempted to distance himself from the scandal after being asked questions at a National Press Club meeting. Morrison was asked why his office had approved an extra $42.5 million for the sports grants scheme in March 2019 but did not explain. The report by the Secretary of the Department of Prime Minister and Cabinet determined that McKenzie had breached the ministerial code of conduct and, on 2 February, she tendered her resignation as Minister for Agriculture and Deputy Leader of her party. She remained as leader of the Nationals in the Senate, along with Matt Canavan as deputy, as the other 3 Nationals senators were first-termers.

Return to Cabinet

Following a Nationals leadership spill in July 2021, in which Barnaby Joyce replaced Michael McCormack as party leader and Deputy Prime Minister, McKenzie was returned to Cabinet and appointed as Minister for Emergency Management and National Recovery and Resilience and Minister for Regionalisation, Regional Communications and Regional Education.

Other controversies

In 2017, Bridget McKenzie was accused of using parliamentary travel entitlements for personal benefit, during a weekend trip to the Gold Coast in September 2014. Also questioned was a February 2017 trip to Sydney to speak at a Shooting Australia awards ceremony, which was claimed as “electorate business”; media reports suggested that it did not fall under the usual category of parliamentary business, and the city of Sydney is not located in the state of Victoria which Bridget represents.

Bridget McKenzie’s electorate office was in the regional city of Bendigo, and she was described in media headlines as “Bendigo-based” on a number of occasions. In 2018, after maintaining the office in Bendigo as “a National Party campaign office” for some months following her ascension to Cabinet, McKenzie relocated her electorate office to Wodonga, some 250 km away in the federal electorate of Indi, which led to media rumours she would contest the seat, at the 2019 federal election. Although the move rankled Indi-based Liberal Party members, McKenzie had planned to relocate to North East Victoria for many years and was waiting for the Department of Finance’s approval.

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McKenzie is the only Victorian Senator based outside Melbourne and the Electorate office relocation also incorporated the inclusion of a Ministerial office. The move cost taxpayers more than $500,000. In 2016 it was noted that her primary residence was flat in the inner-Melbourne suburb of Elwood, and she stayed in hotels when she visited Bendigo.

In 2020, McKenzie published a biography of Country Party leader John McEwen through Connor Court Publishing. It was launched by journalist Paul Kelly, who described it as “highly readable”, while historian Ross Fitzgerald reviewed it as “a helpful reintroduction to John McEwen”, but “somewhat of a hagiography” and less complete than a previous full-length biography.

Husband

Bridget McKenzie has four children with her ex-husband Tim Edwards, a former police officer, now a massage therapist in Ballarat, which ended in divorce. She was subsequently in a long-distance relationship with David Bennett, a member of the New Zealand Parliament. Both were members of their respective countries’ National Parties. In January 2021, it was reported that McKenzie was in a relationship with her partner Simon Benson, the national affairs editor for News Corp Australia.

Bridget McKenzie net worth

How much is Bridget McKenzie worth? Bridget McKenzie net worth is estimated at around $4 million. Her main source of income is from her career as a politician. McKenzie successful career has earned her some luxurious lifestyles and some fancy cars trips. She is one of the richest and influential politicians in Australia.