Mark Parton

Australian politician (born 1966) From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Mark Stuart Parton (born 24 September 1966) is an Australian conservative politician who is currently serving as leader of the Canberra Liberals and Leader of the Opposition of the Australian Capital Territory since November 2025.[1] He has been a Liberal member of the Legislative Assembly since 2016, representing the electorate of Brindabella.[2] He was a long-running local radio announcer on 2CC before entering politics.[3][4]

Quick facts MLA, 16th Leader of the Opposition of the Australian Capital Territory ...
Mark Parton
Portrait of Mark Parton MLA, Member for Brindabella, outside, in daylight.
Parton in 2024
16th Leader of the Opposition of the Australian Capital Territory
Assumed office
10 November 2025
DeputyDeborah Morris
Preceded byLeanne Castley
13th Leader of the Canberra Liberals
Assumed office
10 November 2025
DeputyDeborah Morris
Preceded byLeanne Castley
8th Speaker of the Australian Capital Territory Legislative Assembly
In office
6 November 2024  10 November 2025
DeputyAndrew Braddock
Preceded byJoy Burch
Succeeded byAndrew Braddock (acting)
Member of the Australian Capital Territory Legislative Assembly
for Brindabella
Assumed office
15 October 2016
Preceded byVal Jeffery
Personal details
BornMark Stuart Parton
(1966-09-24) 24 September 1966 (age 59)
PartyLiberal
ProfessionRadio broadcaster
Websitewww.markparton.com.au
Close

Political career

On 19 April 2023, Parton became one of two ACT Liberals to announce his support for an Indigenous Voice to Parliament, putting him at odds with his party colleague Jeremy Hanson and federal Liberal leader Peter Dutton. He had previously leaned towards a No vote in the referendum though changed his mind after discussions with the Noongar communities in Western Australia. Parton himself has Noongar heritage, but "[does] not identify as Aboriginal".[5]

Following the 2024 election, Parton was elected as Speaker[6][7] and on 10 November 2025, following the resignation of incumbent Leanne Castley, he was elected leader of the Canberra Liberals.[1]

Personal life

Parton was born on 24 September 1966 in York, Western Australia.[2] He is married, with three children and three step-children.[8][9]

Before entering parliament, he ran a marketing business. He had worked in commercial radio for 30 years, starting at age 17 in 6AM in Northam, Western Australia, and working in several different states, with the last 16 years in breakfast programs in Canberra on 2CC.[8][10][11]

He has long been aware of having Aboriginal heritage, but in 2022 researched his family history to find the details.[12]

Parton has admitted to having a caffeine addiction.[13]

Parton is a frequent user of the social media platform TikTok,[14] and was briefly ejected from ACT's parliament after releasing a video that was alleged to breach parliamentary filming rules.[15]

References

Related Articles

Wikiwand AI