1992 in Australia

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Template:Short description Template:Use Australian English Template:Use dmy dates The following lists events that happened during 1992 in Australia.

Template:Infobox Australian year Template:Year in Australia

Incumbents

File:Bill Hayden on 29.5.1990.jpg
Bill Hayden
File:Keating Paul BANNER.jpg
Paul Keating

State and territory leaders

Governors and administrators

Events

January

February

April

May

June

July

  • 1 July - Compulsory superannuation comes into effect.
  • 7 July - The paper $5 note issued from 1967 was replaced by a polymer note.
  • 31 July – Janet Powell resigns from the Australian Democrats, sitting henceforth as an Independent Senator. The Victorian branch of the Democrats fractures acrimoniously, damaging the party nationally.

August

  • 11 August – A meeting with Prime Minister Paul Keating fails to secure for the Greens commitments on global warming, endangered species protection and biodiversity.
  • 18 August – Budget expenditure promises on labour market and training programmes and reducing the sizeable deficit fail to halt the Keating Government's sliding popularity.
  • 30 August – Representatives from the Tasmanian, Queensland and New South Wales Greens, with observers from other states, form the Australian Greens Party at a Sydney meeting.

September

October

  • 3 October – A state election is held in Victoria. Joan Kirner's Labor government is defeated by Jeff Kennett's Liberal party.
  • 6 OctoberRose Hancock – Porteous is fined $1,000 in Perth for forging prescriptions for drugs.
  • 19 October – One of the two men charged with the murder of Dr. Victor Chang pleads guilty.
  • 20 October
    • The trial of the second man accused of murdering Dr. Victor Chang begins.
    • The Federal Opposition unveils Jobsback, its industrial relations policy designed to move from centralised wage-fixing to individual employment contracts negotiated at the enterprise level.
  • 27 October – Senator Bronwyn Bishop attacks the Tax Commissioner over alleged special treatment to the Labor Party.
  • 30 October – The second man charged with the murder of Dr. Victor Chang, Phillip Lim, is found guilty.

November

  • 5 November – Prime Minister Paul Keating announces that the coming election would be a poll on the Goods and Services Tax (GST) and pledged that if the Coalition won, Labor would allow the GST through the Senate.
  • 19 November – With the implications of Fightback! increasingly scrutinised and condemned, and elements in the Coalition "panicking", Federal Opposition Leader John Hewson declares that he would resign rather than abandon the GST.
  • 23 November – Prime Minister Paul Keating announces the end of the ban preventing homosexual men and women from serving in the Australian Defence Force[5]
  • 25 November – The High Court of Australia rules that Independent Phil Cleary had been ineligible to stand for Wills as he was an Education Department employee on unpaid leave ("officers of the Crown" cannot stand for Parliament). His Labor and Liberal opponents were also declared ineligible, as they both held dual citizenship.

December

  • 18 December – Federal Opposition Leader John Hewson unveils Fightback Mark II which includes abandoning the GST on basic food items and childcare and the threat to cut off the dole after 9 months.
  • 22 December – The men who murdered heart surgeon Dr. Victor Chang are each sentenced to 20 years jail.
  • Adelaide receives it highest annual rainfall on record, totalling Template:Convert.[6]

Full date unknown

Arts and literature

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Film

Television

Sport

Births

Deaths

See also

References

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  1. The Courier-Mail, 10 February 1992, p.1
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  6. Adelaide West Terrace (023000) Monthly Rainfall Template:Webarchive Adelaide Kent Town (023090) Monthly Rainfall Template:Webarchive
  7. United States Subsidies on Upload Cotton - Opening Statement of Brazil to the World Trade Organisation Template:Webarchive, Brazil Ministério das Relações Exteriores, February 2007
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