Deputy Premier of South Australia

South Australian deputy head of government (1968, 1970–) From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Deputy Premier of South Australia is the deputy head of government and the second highest ranking minister of the Government of South Australia. The current deputy premier is Kyam Maher, who was selected by Premier Peter Malinauskas in September 2025 during a reshuffle of the ministry.

StyleThe Honourable (formal)
Deputy Premier (informal)
Member of
NominatorPremier of South Australia
Quick facts of South Australia, Style ...
Deputy Premier of South Australia
Incumbent
Kyam Maher
since 19 September 2025
Department of the Premier and Cabinet
StyleThe Honourable (formal)
Deputy Premier (informal)
Member of
Reports toPremier of South Australia
NominatorPremier of South Australia
AppointerGovernor of South Australia
on the advice of the premier
Term lengthAt the governor's pleasure
Formation26 March 1968
First holderDes Corcoran
SalaryA$402,880 (2025)
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History

The office of Deputy Premier was created in March 1968. The first to serve in the position was Labor deputy leader Des Corcoran. Prior to that time the term was sometimes used unofficially for the second-highest ranking minister in the government, usually the Treasurer.

In both Labor and Liberal governments, the deputy premier is usually the party's deputy leader.

Two deputy premiers have subsequently become Premier in their own right: Des Corcoran and Rob Kerin. This last happened in 2001, when Rob Kerin became premier after John Olsen's resignation. Dean Brown did the reverse, becoming Deputy Premier to Rob Kerin, 5 years after his own premiership ended at the hands of John Olsen.

South Australia's longest-serving deputy premier is Kevin Foley, who served in the position from March 2002 to February 2011.

Duties

The duties of the deputy premier are to act on behalf of the premier in his or her absence overseas or on leave. The deputy premier has additionally always held at least one substantive portfolio. It is possible for a minister to hold only the portfolio of Deputy Premier, but this has never happened.

If the premier were to die, become incapacitated or resign, the Governor would normally appoint the deputy premier as Premier. If the governing or majority party had not yet elected a new leader, that appointment would be on an interim basis. Should a different leader emerge, that person would then be appointed Premier.

List of deputy premiers

The following is a list of deputy premiers of South Australia, from 1968 to present.[1]

More information Order, Minister ...
Order Minister Political
party
Premier Term of office
Took office Left office Tenure
1 Des Corcoran Labor Dunstan 26 March 1968 16 April 1968 21 days
(1) Des Corcoran Labor Dunstan 2 June 1970 15 March 1979 8 years, 258 days
2 Hugh Hudson Labor Corcoran 15 March 1979 18 September 1979 187 days
3 Roger Goldsworthy Liberal Tonkin 18 September 1979 10 November 1982 3 years, 53 days
4 Jack Wright Labor Bannon 10 November 1982 16 July 1985 2 years, 248 days
5 Don Hopgood Labor 16 July 1985 4 September 1992 7 years, 50 days
6 Frank Blevins Labor Arnold 4 September 1992 14 December 1993 1 year, 101 days
7 Stephen Baker Liberal Brown 14 December 1993 28 November 1996 2 years, 350 days
8 Graham Ingerson Liberal Olsen 28 November 1996 7 July 1998 1 year, 221 days
9 Rob Kerin Liberal 7 July 1998 22 October 2001 3 years, 107 days
10 Dean Brown Liberal Kerin 22 October 2001 5 March 2002 134 days
11 Kevin Foley Labor Rann 5 March 2002 8 February 2011 8 years, 340 days
12 John Rau Labor Rann 8 February 2011 19 March 2018 7 years, 39 days
Weatherill
13 Vickie Chapman Liberal Marshall 19 March 2018 23 November 2021 3 years, 249 days
14 Dan van Holst Pellekaan Liberal 23 November 2021 21 March 2022 118 days
15 Susan Close Labor Malinauskas 21 March 2022 19 September 2025 3 years, 182 days
16 Kyam Maher Labor 19 September 2025 Incumbent 244 days
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References

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