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New South Wales’ Armenian PM reveals details about her family

March 31, 2018 By administrator

Gladys Berejiklian

Gladys Berejiklian

Australia’s 9News TV has prepared a special report about the life and family of New South Wales premier Gladys Berejiklian who is of Armenian descent.

Berejiklian provided details about her professional activities, at the same time showing her big Armenian family.

The prime minister’s family, in particular, shared their memories of what the official was like as a child.

Berejiklian said she prefers to devote all her spare time to her parents, sisters and their children.

The Armenian National Committee of America (ANCA) rolled out an Armenian red carpet for Berejiklian during her visit to Washington, DC as part of Australia’s largest ever trade delegation to the United States in late February.

Berejiklian joined the Liberal Party in 1993 and was first elected to represent Willoughby in the NSW Parliament in 2003, becoming NSW Transport Minister in 2011, Treasurer in 2015 and ascending to the position of NSW Premier in 2017, only the second woman to hold that post.

Alongside her successes in each of these positions, Berejiklian has been instrumental in representing Australian Armenian community concerns, advocating for state and federal recognition of the Armenian Genocide, supporting Republic of Artsakh freedom, and expanding Australia-Armenia ties.

Filed Under: News Tagged With: Gladys Berejiklian, New South Wales

The rise of Gladys Berejiklian to premier – The Sydney Morning Herald

January 25, 2017 By administrator

By James Robertson
Following the shock resignation of Mike Baird on Thursday, speculation surrounds NSW Treasurer Gladys Berejiklian to succeed him.
In the teeth of difficult polling, she took to the Glad-mobile.
The white delivery van plastered with posters calculatedly omitting her last name (it’s pronounced Ber-a-jik-lee-en), helped her sneak over the line by fewer than 150 votes, in a result that wasn’t known for days.
At the last state election, she nearly tripled the vote of her rival and claimed a two-party preferred vote of 75 per cent.

On Monday morning, Ms Berejiklian, the kindergartener who barely spoke English but became school captain of her public school, will transform again, from the quintessential local member, to the Treasurer in charge of a $70 billion budget, to NSW’s 45th premier.
There’s a lot the state is yet to learn about the Masterchef-loving former checkout chick. (Her aisle had a cohort of loyal customers who noticed she would mistakenly scan artichokes as much-cheaper chokos).
Her colleagues believe her authenticity will be the key to connecting with voters as premier, after years of favouring diligent work to conspicuously building a profile.

“People may know that NSW is number one again,” one senior NSW Liberal says. “But there’s a bit of a sense that not everyone is sharing [the proceeds]. She’s the perfect person to tell that story.”
In more than one way Ms Berejiklian is the photo-negative of Premier Mike Baird, the Kings-educated son of a former Liberal Minister.
She was the daughter of a welder and nurse who came to Australia from Jerusalem and Syria in the 1960s. She spoke English only occasionally before the age of five. Her mother encouraged her to speak up in class whenever possible to practise the language.
Friends say her Armenian heritage influenced her progressive brand of Liberalism.
But she counts a sit-in demonstration in the principal’s office of her public high school as lighting the fuse on a career in politics that has often seen her stake out tough positions. (The school closure was reversed.)
“She was Young Liberal president when Pauline Hanson was first on the scene,” says North Sydney federal Liberal MP and friend of two decades Trent Zimmerman. “She was adamant that the party had to take a stand against racism. She took the view the best way to counter extremism is to speak out.”
(The Left-faction stalwart has also broken with other party members, including Mr Baird, to vote for same-sex adoption and stem-cell research.)
Friends describe a woman of incredible discipline and who starts her days reading ministerial briefings over breakfast and who is often caught checking emails under the dinner table.
But she never misses Sunday visits with family and is extremely close to her two sisters and six godchildren.
She made her name as transport minister, once thought to be the cursed portfolio of NSW politics.
“She really is the most determined, hard-working person I know,” says Liberal MLC and President of the NSW Upper House, Don Harwin. “And yet I struggle to think of anyone who doesn’t like her.”
But even former premier Barry O’Farrell, perhaps her biggest backer in politics, conceded she didn’t put herself forward enough.
Opponents sense a weakness. Even before she’s been sworn in, attacks from shock jock Alan Jones and Labor, which is counting her understated style as a weakness, have already zeroed in on the question of whether she’s ready for the top job.
But her colleagues, who coalesced around her in little more than a day, say they have little doubt.
“Once she’s made up her mind, she doesn’t waver,” Mr Zimmerman says.

Filed Under: News Tagged With: Australia, Gladys Berejiklian, premier, rise

The glass cliff: Gladys Berejiklian becomes latest woman to take the reins in a time of crisis

January 25, 2017 By administrator

This week, New South Wales got a new premier. Taking over the leadership of the Liberal Party, and taking the reins from Mike Baird, is Gladys Berejiklian who will become just the second woman to run Australia’s biggest state.

Such a statement has been made by reporter Alana Schetzer in her article published in ABC News Australian news agency.

“For progressives across the country striving for gender equality, this is a momentous occasion. This should be reason for celebration, but there is a darker undertone of why the duty to steer NSW through its heavy infrastructure calendar and ongoing controversies about its lock-out laws fell onto the shoulders of a woman, and not a man,” the article reads.

The author notes that the Research, and a long list of historical examples, have shown that when governments and businesses find themselves in trouble, they seek out women and other minorities to take over.

A 15-year research project that analysed the CEO changes of Fortune 500 companies in the US revealed that women and people of colour were more likely to be asked to lead when their companies were in crisis or their performance was weak.

She observes that this is not a case of smashing the glass ceiling, but tackling the glass cliff, which is what happens when a woman rises to the leadership under such circumstances. It creates an equal playing field for a short time, but only because it suits those who already control power.

“And taking over during such a precarious time means that women are brought in to clean up the mess, and it often sets them up to fail,” she added.

The author reminds of other similar cases when women took power in the similar circumstances_ Julia Gillard, Theresa May, Marissa Mayer, Joan Kirner and the others.

“The fact that it remains a near-novelty when a woman climbs to the top of her field is a reminder that women are still rarely welcomed to take power when there are other options that fit the historic mould of what a person in charge should look like: an affluent white man of Christian background,” she noted.

The author observes that despite those who persist with the disproven myth that sexism has been solved and that the world is equal for men, women, and other genders, being a woman in power remains a minefield of blatant sexism. At her first press conference as premier, Berejiklian was asked whether she thought she would be disadvantaged because she’s unmarried and childless. Men are simply not asked this question, nor does it even register with journalists and the public to think of it.

“The glass ceiling remains in part because of the glass cliff; if women are mostly considered only worth taking a risk on during times of crisis, then society will continue to view women’s leadership potential only when it needs a janitor,” she concluded.

The source reminds that Alana Schetzer is a Melbourne-based journalist and editor. She worked at The Age as a news journalist for five years and now freelances and teaches writing and journalism at University of Melbourne.

 

Source Panorama.am

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Australian, Gladys Berejiklian

BREAKING NEWS: Armenian Gladys Berejiklian a new Premier of Australia’s largest state of New South Wales (NSW),

January 22, 2017 By administrator

Gladys Berejiklian is the new Premier of Australia’s largest state of New South Wales (NSW),

ANC-AU Report: after being elected to the role unopposed by her Party this morning.

The Armenian National Committee of Australia congratulates our former board member, who is also a former member of the Armenian Youth Federation of Australia, and a former basketballer and Scout with Homenetmen Australia.

Filed Under: News Tagged With: Australia, Gladys Berejiklian, new Premier

Australian Armenian Gladys Berejiklian expected to become next NSW Premier

January 20, 2017 By administrator

ABC – New South Wales Treasurer Gladys Berejiklian confirms she will stand for the state’s top job, as outgoing Premier Mike Baird says: “I haven’t backed anyone”.

Mike Baird announced his resignation, citing the need to support his family.

A partyroom meeting is planned for Monday and a leadership spill is expected to happen on Tuesday, but it is unlikely there will be a ballot, as the ABC has been told the leadership positions will be decided by the partyroom earlier.

On ABC News, Mr Baird said he had not backed anyone.

“Gladys Berejiklian would be outstanding, no doubt about it,” he said.

“There is an incredible, talented group of ministers, many have huge potential both short-term and long-term.”

In a statement confirming she would run for the top job, Ms Berejiklian said she was “deeply saddened” by Mr Baird’s decision to retire.

“Mike has been an inspiring leader and a man of enormous integrity who has left an outstanding and indelible mark on the state of NSW,” she said.

“Today is Mike’s day — but I would like to make it clear that I will be standing for the leadership.”

It is likely that Dominic Perrottet will be the deputy leader of the NSW Liberal Party.

The ABC understands Transport Minister Andrew Constance is also considering running.

While it was expected that Planning Minister Rob Stokes would also run for the leadership, he has since confirmed he will bow out of the race.

These are the likely frontrunners who may contest the leadership positions:

Treasurer and the Deputy Leader of the NSW Liberal Party, Ms Berejiklian is considered the frontrunner to be the next Premier.

Ms Berejiklian is part of the Liberal Party’s moderate faction and was elected unopposed as Mr Baird’s Liberal deputy in April 2014.

The 46-year-old former Commonwealth Bank executive was elected the Member for Willoughby, on Sydney’s lower north shore, in 2003.

She was appointed transport minister after Barry O’Farrell led the Coalition to a landslide win in 2011, a position she held until Mike Baird appointed her Treasurer after the 2015 election.

She is NSW’s first female Treasurer.

In October 2016, Ms Berejiklian declared the state debt free with a final surplus for the 2015-16 financial year of $4.7 billion.

Labor attributed the debt-free status to the sale of infrastructure assets including the partial sale of Ausgrid, but the Government pointed to investment in other projects such as Sydney’s WestConnex and the light rail.

Ms Berejiklian is the daughter of Armenian migrants and a granddaughter of victims of the 1915 Armenian genocide.

Filed Under: News Tagged With: Armenian, Australian, Gladys Berejiklian, NSW Premier

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