Profile picture of Hon Dr John Bannon AO

Hon Dr John Bannon AO

Ross Smith
House of Assembly

About Me

Full Name
John Charles Bannon AO
Date of Birth
07 May 1943
Party
Australian Labor Party
Position
Former Member
Electorate
Ross Smith
House
House of Assembly
Date Elected
17 September 1977
Public Activities
Born in Bendigo, Victoria in 1943, John Bannon was educated in Adelaide. During the 1960's he took degrees in Arts and Law at the University of Adelaide, becoming president of the Australian Union of Students in 1968. During the early to mid-1970's he held a number of advisory positions including one in the Whitlam government's ministry of Labor and Immigration. In 1977 he was elected to the House of Assembly and within a year had been elevated to the Dunstan Cabinet. Labor's election loss in 1979 saw Bannon elected Opposition Leader. Guiding the Labor Party to victory in the 1982 election, Bannon became Premier and Treasurer, positions he would retain for almost a decade. The Bannon Premiership was characterised by an emphasis on careful budgetary management, offset by attempts to expand the state's economic foundations via the attraction of ambitious, large scale projects. The most notable of these included a multimillion dollar submarine contract, the Formula One Grand Prix and the controversial Multi-Function Polis initiative. Despite winning a third term in government at the 1989 election, Bannon's Premiership became increasingly tenuous as he was forced to announce in February 1991 a billion dollar bail-out of the troubled State Bank of South Australia. Further revelations of the magnitude of the State Bank disaster and Bannon's role in this led to his resignation in September 1992. He did not contest his seat of Ross Smith in the 1993 election. From 1994 to 1999 he was a director of the Australian Broadcasting Commission. Dr Bannon was appointed as Master of St Mark’s College, University of Adelaide from 2000 until 2008. He attained his PhD in history at Flinders University in 2006. He was a board member of Cricket Australia and the South Australian Cricket Association, Chair of the National Archives Advisory Council, and an active member of numerous other community organisations. Dr Bannon died in Adelaide on December 13 2015.
Deceased
13 December 2015

Electoral History

Date
District
House
Party
Reason (if retired)
17 Sep 1977 - 10 Dec 1993
Ross Smith
House of Assembly
Australian Labor Party
Retired

Offices Held

10 Dec 1993 - Current
Former Member
02 Oct 1979 - 10 Nov 1982
Leader of the Opposition

Ministerial Appointments

14 Dec 1989 - 02 Sep 1992
Minister of State Development
10 Nov 1982 - 18 Dec 1985
Minister of State Development
10 Nov 1982 - 20 Apr 1989
Minister for the Arts
10 Nov 1982 - 04 Sep 1992
Premier
10 Nov 1982 - 04 Sep 1992
Treasurer
15 Mar 1979 - 18 Sep 1979
Minister of Local Government
15 Mar 1979 - 18 Sep 1979
Minister of Recreation and Sport
28 Sep 1978 - 15 Mar 1979
Minister Assisting the Minister of Ethnic Affairs
28 Sep 1978 - 18 Sep 1979
Minister of Community Development
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Acknowledgement of Country

The Parliament of South Australia acknowledges Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples as the traditional owners of this country throughout Australia, and their connection to land and community. We pay our respect to them and their cultures and to the Elders both past and present.