
Dutton dethroner shares emotional journey to parliament
Dickson MP Ali France spoke of the painful loss of her 19-year-old son Henry, who died from leukaemia in February 2024 after an 18-month battle.
Ms France was one of the big winners of the federal election, unseating former opposition leader Peter Dutton at the May poll.
In her first speech to parliament, she spoke of her late son's courage and him being the drive behind her campaign.
"He told me many times, that this election was my time," she said in the speech.
"He was convinced I would win and said a number of times, 'don't make me the excuse for you not doing important things'.
"His words, his courage, were with me every day of the campaign. Henry was instrumental in getting me to this place."
Ms France said her "epic journey" to sitting in federal parliament was not part of any grand plan, but rather the result of hundreds of little steps.
The 2025 election was the third time she ran for the Queensland seat.
"A lifetime of small acts of kindness and support from so many good people," she told the House on Tuesday.
In 2011, Ms France lost her leg.
She was taking her youngest son Zac, then four years old, to an appointment at a Brisbane shopping centre when an out-of-control car came veering towards them.
Her left leg was crushed from her thigh down as she was pinned against another vehicle.
Martin Wullschleger, the trauma surgeon whose split-second decision to amputate saved Ms France's life, was in the gallery to hear her maiden speech.
"The first time I went out to dinner a lady stopped us and said, 'you have such a pretty face, what a pity you are in a wheelchair'," she said.
Following six surgeries in four years, PTSD and severe pain left Ms France at the lowest point in her life.
It was then she came across Iraqi orthopaedic surgeon Munjed Al Muderis who told her he would do everything to get her walking again as she underwent a risky surgery to implant a metal prosthetic.
The refugee and surgeon also watched on from the gallery.
She described being pretty angry by the time she joined Labor in 2016.
"Landing a job was incredibly difficult for me. People only saw disability," she said.
"It's like I was born the day of my accident."
Ms France was the first person elected at the May poll to give her maiden speech in the 48th parliament, with other first-term MPs to deliver their remarks in coming days.
The first person to claim the scalp of an opposition leader at a federal election has recounted her path to parliament in an emotional first speech.
Dickson MP Ali France spoke of the painful loss of her 19-year-old son Henry, who died from leukaemia in February 2024 after an 18-month battle.
Ms France was one of the big winners of the federal election, unseating former opposition leader Peter Dutton at the May poll.
In her first speech to parliament, she spoke of her late son's courage and him being the drive behind her campaign.
"He told me many times, that this election was my time," she said in the speech.
"He was convinced I would win and said a number of times, 'don't make me the excuse for you not doing important things'.
"His words, his courage, were with me every day of the campaign. Henry was instrumental in getting me to this place."
Ms France said her "epic journey" to sitting in federal parliament was not part of any grand plan, but rather the result of hundreds of little steps.
The 2025 election was the third time she ran for the Queensland seat.
"A lifetime of small acts of kindness and support from so many good people," she told the House on Tuesday.
In 2011, Ms France lost her leg.
She was taking her youngest son Zac, then four years old, to an appointment at a Brisbane shopping centre when an out-of-control car came veering towards them.
Her left leg was crushed from her thigh down as she was pinned against another vehicle.
Martin Wullschleger, the trauma surgeon whose split-second decision to amputate saved Ms France's life, was in the gallery to hear her maiden speech.
"The first time I went out to dinner a lady stopped us and said, 'you have such a pretty face, what a pity you are in a wheelchair'," she said.
Following six surgeries in four years, PTSD and severe pain left Ms France at the lowest point in her life.
It was then she came across Iraqi orthopaedic surgeon Munjed Al Muderis who told her he would do everything to get her walking again as she underwent a risky surgery to implant a metal prosthetic.
The refugee and surgeon also watched on from the gallery.
She described being pretty angry by the time she joined Labor in 2016.
"Landing a job was incredibly difficult for me. People only saw disability," she said.
"It's like I was born the day of my accident."
Ms France was the first person elected at the May poll to give her maiden speech in the 48th parliament, with other first-term MPs to deliver their remarks in coming days.
The first person to claim the scalp of an opposition leader at a federal election has recounted her path to parliament in an emotional first speech.
Dickson MP Ali France spoke of the painful loss of her 19-year-old son Henry, who died from leukaemia in February 2024 after an 18-month battle.
Ms France was one of the big winners of the federal election, unseating former opposition leader Peter Dutton at the May poll.
In her first speech to parliament, she spoke of her late son's courage and him being the drive behind her campaign.
"He told me many times, that this election was my time," she said in the speech.
"He was convinced I would win and said a number of times, 'don't make me the excuse for you not doing important things'.
"His words, his courage, were with me every day of the campaign. Henry was instrumental in getting me to this place."
Ms France said her "epic journey" to sitting in federal parliament was not part of any grand plan, but rather the result of hundreds of little steps.
The 2025 election was the third time she ran for the Queensland seat.
"A lifetime of small acts of kindness and support from so many good people," she told the House on Tuesday.
In 2011, Ms France lost her leg.
She was taking her youngest son Zac, then four years old, to an appointment at a Brisbane shopping centre when an out-of-control car came veering towards them.
Her left leg was crushed from her thigh down as she was pinned against another vehicle.
Martin Wullschleger, the trauma surgeon whose split-second decision to amputate saved Ms France's life, was in the gallery to hear her maiden speech.
"The first time I went out to dinner a lady stopped us and said, 'you have such a pretty face, what a pity you are in a wheelchair'," she said.
Following six surgeries in four years, PTSD and severe pain left Ms France at the lowest point in her life.
It was then she came across Iraqi orthopaedic surgeon Munjed Al Muderis who told her he would do everything to get her walking again as she underwent a risky surgery to implant a metal prosthetic.
The refugee and surgeon also watched on from the gallery.
She described being pretty angry by the time she joined Labor in 2016.
"Landing a job was incredibly difficult for me. People only saw disability," she said.
"It's like I was born the day of my accident."
Ms France was the first person elected at the May poll to give her maiden speech in the 48th parliament, with other first-term MPs to deliver their remarks in coming days.
The first person to claim the scalp of an opposition leader at a federal election has recounted her path to parliament in an emotional first speech.
Dickson MP Ali France spoke of the painful loss of her 19-year-old son Henry, who died from leukaemia in February 2024 after an 18-month battle.
Ms France was one of the big winners of the federal election, unseating former opposition leader Peter Dutton at the May poll.
In her first speech to parliament, she spoke of her late son's courage and him being the drive behind her campaign.
"He told me many times, that this election was my time," she said in the speech.
"He was convinced I would win and said a number of times, 'don't make me the excuse for you not doing important things'.
"His words, his courage, were with me every day of the campaign. Henry was instrumental in getting me to this place."
Ms France said her "epic journey" to sitting in federal parliament was not part of any grand plan, but rather the result of hundreds of little steps.
The 2025 election was the third time she ran for the Queensland seat.
"A lifetime of small acts of kindness and support from so many good people," she told the House on Tuesday.
In 2011, Ms France lost her leg.
She was taking her youngest son Zac, then four years old, to an appointment at a Brisbane shopping centre when an out-of-control car came veering towards them.
Her left leg was crushed from her thigh down as she was pinned against another vehicle.
Martin Wullschleger, the trauma surgeon whose split-second decision to amputate saved Ms France's life, was in the gallery to hear her maiden speech.
"The first time I went out to dinner a lady stopped us and said, 'you have such a pretty face, what a pity you are in a wheelchair'," she said.
Following six surgeries in four years, PTSD and severe pain left Ms France at the lowest point in her life.
It was then she came across Iraqi orthopaedic surgeon Munjed Al Muderis who told her he would do everything to get her walking again as she underwent a risky surgery to implant a metal prosthetic.
The refugee and surgeon also watched on from the gallery.
She described being pretty angry by the time she joined Labor in 2016.
"Landing a job was incredibly difficult for me. People only saw disability," she said.
"It's like I was born the day of my accident."
Ms France was the first person elected at the May poll to give her maiden speech in the 48th parliament, with other first-term MPs to deliver their remarks in coming days.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

Sky News AU
3 hours ago
- Sky News AU
US ‘claiming a win' after Labor lifts American beef ban
Sky News host James Macpherson says the Trump administration is 'claiming a win' after Labor lifted the long-standing ban on US beef. 'The Albanese government has insisted its sudden decision to lift the beef ban had nothing to do with trade and certainly nothing to do with Donald Trump,' Mr Macpherson said. 'So, it is all just a weird coincidence.'

Sky News AU
4 hours ago
- Sky News AU
‘Fiscal responsibility': Albanese's HECS promise labelled a ‘vote-buying exercise'
Sky News host James Macpherson comments on Prime Minister Anthony Albanese's vow to cut HECS debt by 20 per cent. 'Labor politicians have made a huge song and dance about cutting student debt by 20 percent,' Mr Macpherson said. ''The Albanese government's $16 billion student loan handout was nothing more than a vote-buying exercise - an irresponsible bribe paid for with borrowed money on the national credit card.' 'The irony is that tradies – many of whom never attended university - will be among those forced to pay down the debt of people with degrees. 'Except 'students' needs an apostrophe - which is ironic, considering we're now bankrolling degrees in English.'

Sky News AU
4 hours ago
- Sky News AU
‘Self-flagellation wrapped in identity politics': Acknowledgement of Country slammed
Sky News host James Macpherson discusses the first days of parliament, in which the Acknowledgment of Country was performed several times. 'The first order of business for any freshly minted Labor MP these days is not to represent their constituents or offer policy ideas - it's to perform an Acknowledgement of Country,' Mr Macpherson said. 'And this week, one after the other, in a conga line of colonialist contrition, they stood in Parliament to mumble the now-compulsory lines. 'It wasn't just the repetition that struck me, though heaven knows, if I hear 'I acknowledge the Traditional Custodians of the land' one more time, I'll need my own Welcome to Insanity. 'The land is not yours. The air is not yours. And, watching all of that, you get the idea that a Labor seat in parliament isn't yours either … unless you remember to dutifully recite the right lines at the start of every speech. This isn't reconciliation. It's self-flagellation wrapped in identity politics."