Michelle Ananda-Rajah
Michelle Ananda-Rajah MP |
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Member of the Australian Parliament for Higgins |
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Assumed office 21 May 2022 |
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Preceded by | Katie Allen |
Personal details | |
Born | [1] London, United Kingdom |
10 December 1972
Political party | Labor |
Alma mater | University of Melbourne (PhD) University of Sydney (MBBS (Hons)) |
Profession | Medical doctor |
Michelle Renuka Ananda-Rajah (Tamil: மிசேல் ஆனந்தராஜா;[citation needed] born 10 December 1972) is an Australian politician. Ananda-Rajah was elected for the Division of Higgins in the 2022 Australian federal election as a member of the Australian Labor Party.[2][3] Prior to entering politics, she was a clinician-scientist, and infectious diseases physician.[4]
Early life
Ananda-Rajah was born in London to Tamil parents who had fled from Sri Lanka in the early 1970s prior to the Sri Lankan Civil War.[5] She lived in Zambia for 11 years until she moved to Australia as a child.[5] Ananda-Rajah became an Australian citizen in 1996. She renounced her British citizenship in 2021.[1]
Ananda-Rajah achieved her bachelor’s degree in medicine and surgery (MBBS) in 1997 and her PhD in 2014 from the University of Sydney.[5]
Career
Ananda-Rajah worked as a clinician-researcher and physician in infectious diseases and general medicine at Alfred Health for 13 years.[6] She is a graduate of USyd with honours and underwent speciality training in Victoria. In 2019, she was awarded a prestigious TRIP (Translating Research Into Practice) fellowship by the Medical Research Future Fund and appointed to JAMA Network Open as a statistical and methods reviewer.[6]
Ananda-Rajah has published over 50 scientific papers and held several editorial roles in medical journals.[7]
Ananda-Rajah is the co-founder of Healthcare Workers Australia, a grass roots advocacy group which has campaigned since August 2020 for improved respiratory protection.[8]
Politics
Ananda-Rajah was preselected as the Labor candidate for Higgins in July 2021, ahead of the 2022 Australian federal election.[9] She trailed Liberal incumbent Katie Allen for most of the night. However, on the seventh count, the Green candidate's preferences flowed overwhelmingly to Ananda-Rajah. This gave Ananda-Rajah a 2.4% swing in primary vote and a 4.6% swing in two party preferred vote, to win the seat with a two party preferred vote of 52%, or a little under 4,000 votes. By winning, Ananda-Rajah became the first Labor member for Higgins in the seat's 73-year history.[10]
In July 2023 Ananda-Rajah travelled to Israel with Speaker of the House of Representatives Milton Dick as part of bipartisan Australian Parliamentary Delegation to Israel and the Palestinian Territories in which they met members of the Knesset on national security, judicial reform, gender equity, climate change and innovation. During that trip She said "Our cultural and historic ties with Israel run deep and we look forward to strengthening the relationship".[11]
In September 2023, in Zionism Victoria executive meeting she defended the Australian government’s decision to classify the West Bank, including East Jerusalem, as “Occupied Palestinian Territories”[12]
Later in December 2023 Ananda-Rajah travelled to Israel following the October 7 attacks.[13] Her travel and hospitality were funded by AIJAC.[14][15]
In May 2024 , in Temple Beth Israel in Melbourne she criticized Australian government UN vote in favor of elevating the Palestinian Authority (United Nations General Assembly Resolution ES-10/23) saying she felt "very conflicted" and that she “had a conversation” with Foreign Minister Penny Wong after the vote [16]
In July 2024, In an interview with ABC she criticized senator Fatima Payman for crossing the floor in support of recognition of Palestinian state by Australia saying Payman had numerous opportunities within caucus to raise concerns but She has been mute. During the interview referred to Payman as "this person" and "this individual"[17][18]
Personal life
Ananda-Rajah lives in Melbourne with her husband and two children.[6] She is one of the largest property owners in the Parliament, co-owning four residential/investment properties with her husband.[19]
References
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