Standing Committee on Communications, Sport and the Arts

Standing Committee on Communications, Sport and the Arts
47th Parliament of Australia
Type
Type
History
Founded13 September 2016
Preceded byClimate Change, Environment and the Arts
Leadership
Deputy Chair
Structure
Seats10
Political groups
Government (6)
  •   Labor (6)

Opposition (3)

Crossbench (1)

Meeting place
Parliament House
Canberra, Australian Capital Territory
Australia
Website
Standing Committee on Communications and the Arts
Rules
Standing Orders of the House of Representatives

The Standing Committee on Communications and the Arts is a committee of the Australian House of Representatives.[1] The committee is a "General Purpose Standing Committee" governed by Standing Order 215. It consists of nine members, five government members and four non-government members (three members of the official opposition and one member of the crossbench). The chair is appointed by the Prime Minister and the deputy chair by the Leader of the Opposition under Standing Order 232.[2]

History

General Purpose Standing Committees of the House of Representatives were first established in 1987,[3] The committee has been regularly renamed; some recent names include:[4]

Committees Parliament(s)
Environment, Recreation and the Arts 35th-38th[5][6][7]
Communications, Transport and the Arts 39th
Communications, Information Technology and the Arts 40th
41st
Climate Change, Water, Environment and the Arts 42nd
Climate Change, Environment and the Arts 43rd
Communications and the Arts Health and Ageing 44th
Health, Aged Care and Sport 45th
46th
47th
Communications, Sport and the Arts 48th

Membership

47th Parliament

In the 47th parliament (July 2022 – March 2025), the membership of the committee was the following:[8]

Member Party Electorate
Brian Mitchell Chair Labor Division of Lyons, Tasmania
Bridget Archer Deputy Chair Liberal Division of Bass, Tasmania
Libby Coker Labor Division of Corangamite, Victoria
Mark Coulton Nationals Division of Parkes, New South Wales
Zoe Daniel Independent Division of Goldstein, Victoria
Peter Khalil Labor Division of Wills, Victoria
Zoe McKenzie Liberal Division of Flinders, Victoria
Gordon Reid Labor Division of Robertson, New South Wales
Susan Templeman Labor Division of Macquarie, New South Wales

48th Parliament

In the 48th parliament (July 2025 – present), the membership of the committee is the following:[9]

Member Party Electorate
Susan Templeman Chair Labor Division of Macquarie, New South Wales
Mary Aldred Deputy Chair Liberal Division of Monash, Victoria
Mary Doyle Labor Division of Aston, Victoria
Justine Elliot Labor Division of Richmond, New South Wales
David Moncrieff Labor Division of Hughes, New South Wales
Alison Penfold Nationals Division of Lyne, New South Wales
Joanne Ryan Labor Division of Lalor, Victoria
Zali Steggall Independent Division of Warringah, New South Wales
Matt Smith Labor Division of Leichhardt, Queensland
Tom Venning Liberal Division of Grey, South Australia

List of Chairs

Member Party Electorate Parliament(s)
Luke Howarth Liberal National Division of Petrie, Queensland 45th
David Gillespie Nationals Division of Lyne, New South Wales 46th (until 2 July 2021)
Anne Webster Nationals Division of Mallee, Victoria 46th (from 25 August 2021)
Brian Mitchell Labor Division of Lyons, Tasmania 47th
Susan Templeman Labor Division of Macquarie, New South Wales 48th

See also

References

  1. ^ "Role of the Committee". Retrieved 12 March 2024.
  2. ^ "Standing Orders Chapter 16" (PDF). Retrieved 10 March 2024.
  3. ^ "House Votes and Proceedings No. 9 24 September 1987".
  4. ^ "Former House Committees". Retrieved 11 March 2024.
  5. ^ https://parlinfo.aph.gov.au/parlInfo/search/display/display.w3p;query=Id%3A%22chamber%2Fvotes%2F1987-09-24%2F0014%22
  6. ^ https://parlinfo.aph.gov.au/parlInfo/search/display/display.w3p;query=Id%3A%22chamber%2Fvotes%2F1990-05-08%2F0022%22
  7. ^ https://parlinfo.aph.gov.au/parlInfo/search/display/display.w3p;query=Id%3A%22chamber%2Fvotes%2F1996-05-09%2F0006%22
  8. ^ "Communications and the Arts Committee Membership". Retrieved 12 March 2024.
  9. ^ "Communications, Sport and the Arts Committee Membership". Retrieved 2 January 2026.