logo
Australia's youngest-ever senator Charlotte Walker has a lot to learn but says she is ‘not naive'

Australia's youngest-ever senator Charlotte Walker has a lot to learn but says she is ‘not naive'

The Guardian27-05-2025

The median age of Australia's federal parliamentarians is 50.
On election night, as the scale of Labor's victory was revealed, Charlotte Walker was blowing out the candles on her 21st birthday cake.
On Tuesday, she was officially declared a Labor senator for South Australia and became the youngest senator ever elected.
'I'm just taking it a day at a time,' she tells Guardian Australia as she prepares for Senate school in Canberra.
On 3 May Walker worked on polling booths then spent the night in the seat of Boothby, where Labor's Louise Miller-Frost held out against Liberal Rachel Swift. Amid the other celebrations, a colleague sorted her out with cake.
Walker says she loves her work for the Australian Services Union, and would be staying there if she wasn't off to Canberra.
Asked what makes her nervous about her parliamentary debut, she says she is 'not naive'.
'There's a lot to learn,' she says, but the support from her union and Labor colleagues has been 'amazing'.
Sign up for Guardian Australia's breaking news email
Her youth, she says, will bring another perspective to parliament.
'I grew up in the regions,' she says of her childhood in Yankalilla and Normanville. 'I think we need our regions to also remain represented, so hopefully that complements my youth.'
She studied agriculture throughout school, is pondering committee work including on the education and employment committee, and mentions global unpredictability and the cost-of-living crisis as challenges facing the nation.
She describes herself as 'somewhere in the middle' of extraversion and introversion, as someone who is 'empathetic and understanding'.
'I like to have a bit of fun as well,' she says.
Walker takes the youngest-ever-senator mantle from the Western Australian Greens senator Jordon Steele-John, who was 23 when he was elected.
Before him, the South Australian Greens senator Sarah Hanson-Young was elected at 25, and the Australian Democrats senator Natasha Stott Despoja, also from SA, was appointed at 26.
'It's wonderful to hand the baton to another young South Australian woman,' Hanson-Young says.
'There's plenty of older people in politics who don't listen, don't take good advice and make stupid mistakes. Age isn't a determining factor of a good politician – but knowing what you believe and being open to others' views certainly is,' she says.
Sign up to Breaking News Australia
Get the most important news as it breaks
after newsletter promotion
'My main tip is to surround yourself with people who will give you honest advice. And to be true with yourself about what you know and don't know.
'It is impossible to know everything – and you don't need to – but the best skill is to be able to listen.'
The youngest elected parliamentarian was the Liberal Wyatt Roy, who was 20 when he was elected to the House of Representatives.
Walker's election means the Liberal senator David Fawcett, who had been in parliament for 20 years, lost his spot.
The Labor senators Marielle Smith and Karen Grogan, Liberals Alex Antic and Anne Ruston, and Hanson-Young were all re-elected in South Australia.
But Labor taking the sixth spot was entirely unexpected.
The electoral analyst Ben Raue says parties often use young people in elections to 'fill up numbers', or as a practice run for the future.
But Walker has a strong pedigree and is no spot filler. As well as her union work, she was the SA Young Labor president. She says she was raised with 'Labor values'.
'My mum really set me up well to make an informed decision,' she says. 'It wasn't like … 'you will vote Labor'. She gave me the tools I needed to make a good decision and I ended up with Labor.'
She says her mother was with her from her first job in politics and joining the party to now.
'So I think it's been a bit of a whirlwind for her as well,' she says. 'But I hope she's feeling proud.'

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Trump's long list of grievances with Australia revealed: PETER VAN ONSELEN
Trump's long list of grievances with Australia revealed: PETER VAN ONSELEN

Daily Mail​

timean hour ago

  • Daily Mail​

Trump's long list of grievances with Australia revealed: PETER VAN ONSELEN

The anticipated first meeting between Anthony Albanese and Donald Trump on the sidelines of the G7 summit in Canada never happened. Trump pulled the pin at the eleventh hour, jetting back to Washington to deal with the evolving crisis in the Middle East. We are almost six months into Trump's resurrected presidency and Albo still hasn't had a face to face meeting. The excuse, to be fair, is a reasonable one: Escalating tensions with Iran following Israel 's targeted strikes aimed at wiping out its nuclear capabilities is the sort of issue you expect a US President to prioritise over meeting Albo. Nevertheless, Trump had already caught up with British PM Keir Starmer and got movement on a bilateral trade deal with Italy before his departure. Australia has certainly been left knowing where it sits in the international pecking order. Australia got nothing, not even a hallway handshake before events took over. For a government trying to reaffirm the US alliance and get clarity on everything from Trump's commitment to AUKUS to economically risky tariff rollouts, the cancellation of a leaders meeting couldn't have come at a worse time for the government. Albo desperately needs to build a personal connection with Trump to help Australia manage his unpredictability. Canberra's decision to sanction two far-right Israeli ministers drew swift criticism from US Republicans and pro-Israel voices close to Trump. Any lingering resentment on that front can't now be papered over with a leader to leader meeting either. Washington's complaints over our defence spending was another issue that a face to face meeting might have helped with. So when and where will Trump and Albo finally now meet? It's hard to imagine Trump bothering to make his way down under, meaning that an Oval Office catch up is the most likely next opportunity. If Trump ever extends the offer Albo's way. But if the experience of other world leaders who have caught up with Trump at the White House is anything to go by, it is a place where niceties go to die. A sideline catch up at the G7 would have been much easier. Just ask Volodymyr Zelensky. He left Washington uncertain the US would even continue to back Ukraine in its ongoing war with Russia. If Albanese ever does get a sit down Oval Office meeting with Trump he'd be wise to prepare for anything. The US President isn't known for sticking to agendas. I remember visiting the Trump White House back in 2019 when then PM Scott Morrison was honoured with a state dinner. Their Oval Office meeting was supposed to be just a photo opportunity once the media were allowed in. Instead Trump started taking questions and before you knew it the best part of an hour had passed by. That's Trump's style, only on that occasion he was in a positive mood. These days he has more than a few grumbles, including with the Australian government. He could raise tariffs, AUKUS, TikTok bans, China, Julian Assange or none of the above. For all the careful briefing notes and diplomatic prep Team Albo is likely to do if the meeting ever happens, our PM could find himself facing questions about beef exports one minute and 'woke' universities the next. There is no script that will be followed, and we all know Albo loves the certainty of a script. Until the elusive meeting happens, our PM remains on the outside looking in. For Australia, that's not just awkward. It's potentially dangerous, given the length and breadth of issues in need of attention right now.

Sen. Tina Smith says she confronted Sen. Mike Lee about his 'cruel' social media posts on the Minnesota shootings
Sen. Tina Smith says she confronted Sen. Mike Lee about his 'cruel' social media posts on the Minnesota shootings

NBC News

time2 hours ago

  • NBC News

Sen. Tina Smith says she confronted Sen. Mike Lee about his 'cruel' social media posts on the Minnesota shootings

Sen. Tina Smith, D-Minn., said Monday that she confronted Republican Sen. Mike Lee of Utah over his social media posts about the suspect in shootings that took the life of a Minnesota lawmaker and her husband. Smith said she confronted Lee after his 'cruel' posts, in which he included a photo of the suspected gunman and wrote, 'this is what happens When Marxists don't get their way.' 'I wanted him to know how much pain that caused me and the other people in my state and I think around the country, who think that this was a brutal attack,' Smith told reporters. She added that Lee needed to hear from her 'directly' and think about the 'impact his actions had.' 'I don't know whether Senator Lee thought fully through what it was, you'd have to ask him, but I needed him to hear from me directly what impact I think his cruel statement had on me, his colleague,' Smith said. A gunman fatally shot state Rep. Melissa Hortman and her husband Mark, and injured state Sen. John Hoffman and his wife Yvette Hoffman. Vance Boelter, the suspect wanted in the shootings, was arrested Sunday night. Authorities have described the shooting as a 'politically motivated assassination.' Lee's posts sparked condemnation from other Democrats as well, including Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., and Sen. Amy Klobuchar, D-Minn.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store