Everything about David Tonkin totally explained
Dr
David Oliver Tonkin AO (
20 July 1929 –
2 October 2000) was the 38th
Premier of South Australia, serving from 18 September 1979 to 10 November 1982.
Early life
Born in
Adelaide, Tonkin’s father died when he was five, leaving Tonkin’s mother to raise him and his siblings. Tonkin attended local public schools before gaining a scholarship to
St Peter's College. Accepted into Medicine at the
University of Adelaide, Tonkin worked as a taxi driver while completing his degree and practiced as a
General Practitioner before undertaking a postgraduate
ophthalmology course in
London. He established a practice in Adelaide and was soon considered one of the city’s leading eye surgeons.
Tonkin’s dedication to public service was in evidence through his honorary service as an eye surgeon to Adelaide public hospitals and the initiation, through the
Lions Club, of Australia’s first public screening programme for
glaucoma. In 1962 Tonkin became executive director of the Australian Foundation for Prevention of Blindness SA Inc.
Early political career
From a young age, Tonkin was a supporter of the
Liberal and Country League (LCL), handing out how-to-vote cards at the 1939 election for the party. His prominence in Adelaide society and his community service made him an ideal LCL candidate and in 1967, he unsuccessfully ran for the
Electoral district of Norwood against
Don Dunstan before winning the adjacent seat of
Bragg at the 1970 election.
Tonkin quickly gained a reputation as a progressive member of the LCL and was an early supporter of the
Liberal Movement faction created by former premier
Steele Hall, although Tonkin remained with the LCL when the Liberal Movement split from it.
Tonkin first gained statewide prominence in 1974 when he successfully introduced a private member's bill to outlaw sex discrimination, the first such law in
Australia. This prominence led to a successful 1975 challenge to LCL parliamentary leader
Bruce Eastick for the party leadership.
As leader, Tonkin worked toward healing the internal party wounds by coaxing the Liberal Movement back into the Liberal fold, which helped the
Liberal Party to regain government at the 1979 election against a seemingly disunited
Australian Labor Party.
Premier
As Premier, Tonkin combined fiscal conservatism with implementing socially progressive reforms. In the former, Tonkin made significant cuts to the public service, earning him the enmity of the unions, while an example of the latter was the passage of the land rights bill and the return to the
Pitjantjatjara people of 10 per cent of South Australia's area.
Other significant actions include the development of the
copper and
uranium mine at
Olympic Dam (
Roxby Downs), extending his earlier anti-discrimination provisions to include physical disability, establishing the Ethnic Affairs Commission and introducing random breath testing.
Bidding for re-election at the 1982 election, Tonkin had support of the South Australian media, but nationwide the economy was in poor shape. He lost the election to the
John Bannon led Labor Party, and resigned from parliament shortly after following a heart complaint.
After politics
Subsequently, Tonkin returned to ophthalmology and served in various capacities in different government and community organisations, including chairman of the board of the State Opera from 1985 to 1986 and vice-president of
Sturt Football Club. In 1986 he assumed the
London-based position of secretary-general of the
Commonwealth Parliamentary Association.
Returning to Australia in 1992, Tonkin was made an Officer of the Order of Australia in 1993 and served as chairman of the
South Australian Film Corporation from 1994 to 1996. A stroke in 1996 permanently affected his speech and forced him into retirement.
Tonkin was awarded the Liberal Party's outstanding achievement award in 2000 by
Prime Minister,
John Howard and died in his sleep at
Menglers Hill,
Barossa Valley, South Australia, on 2 October 2000 while attending a music festival. He was survived by his wife Prue, six children and 10 grandchildren.
Following his death, the Pitjantjatrara people paid tribute to Tonkin, stating that no Liberal politician had done as much for Aboriginal people. Others stated that he lost the 1982 election because he lacked the ruthlessness required of successful politicians.
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