David Crisafulli

Politician

Birthday April 14, 1979

Birth Sign Aries

Birthplace Ingham, Queensland, Australia

Age 44 years old

Nationality Australia

#52211 Most Popular

1979

David Frank Crisafulli (born 14 April 1979) is an Australian politician who is the current leader of the Opposition in Queensland, holding office as the leader of the Liberal National Party since November 2020.

1998

In 1998, he returned to his home town of Ingham as a cadet reporter at the Herbert River Express.

2000

Born and raised in Ingham, Queensland, Crisafulli graduated with a Bachelor of Journalism degree from James Cook University in Townsville in 2000.

In 2000, Crisafulli moved into television, becoming a journalist with WIN News in Townsville, and was made chief of staff of the Townsville newsroom in 2002.

During that time, Crisafulli also worked as a correspondent for The Australian and Sunday Mail newspapers, did weekly work for DMG Regional Radio as a newsreader, and lectured in journalism at James Cook University.

2003

In 2003, Crisafulli was appointed a ministerial media advisor to the then Howard government Minister and Liberal Senator for Queensland, Ian MacDonald.

2004

In 2004, Crisafulli successfully ran for what was then the 100% Labor Party-controlled Townsville City Council, on a conservative platform.

2008

In 2008, when the Townsville and Thuringowa councils were merged, he made a deal with Les Tyrell, the former Thuringowa mayor, to run in partnership for the mayor and deputy mayor positions on the new council.

2012

He was the member for Mundingburra from 2012 to 2015, holding ministerial portfolios in the Newman government.

He was elected as deputy mayor, an office he held until his resignation in 2012 to run for a seat in the Queensland Parliament.

During his second term on Council, he became the chairman of the Townsville City Council Planning Committee.

In the 2012 Queensland state election, Crisafulli was elected to the Legislative Assembly of Queensland in the seat of Mundingburra, as a member of the Liberal National party.

He was appointed the Minister for Local Government in the new Newman government.

2013

In February 2013, his role was expanded when he became Minister for Local Government, Community Recovery and Resilience.

2015

He re-contested Mundingburra at the 2015 Queensland state election but was defeated by the Labor candidate Coralee O'Rourke.

Following his 2015 election loss, Crisafulli and his family relocated to Hope Island on Queensland's Gold Coast.

He subsequently ran a small business giving advice about dealing with government and business development opportunities.

2017

He has been the member of the Legislative Assembly for Broadwater since 2017.

In May 2017, he defeated incumbent Broadwater MP Verity Barton for LNP preselection to contest the 2017 election, and subsequently won the Broadwater seat.

In December 2017, after the election of Deb Frecklington as Leader of the Opposition, Crisafulli was appointed the Shadow Minister for Environment, Science and the Great Barrier Reef, and Shadow Minister for Tourism.

2020

On 12 November 2020, Crisafulli became Leader of the Opposition in Queensland, after the Liberal National Party elected him as party leader following the resignation of Deb Frecklington.

Crisafulli describes himself as a centrist and as a decentralist.

Crisafulli opposes allowing trans women to compete against women in sport and voted for an unsuccessful bill tabled by Katter's Australian Party (KAP) leader Robbie Katter that sought to ban trans women from playing women's sports in Queensland.

Crisafulli opposed the Indigenous Voice to Parliament, but decided not to campaign against it and members of the LNP were given a free vote on the issue.

Crisafulli has said if he is elected as premier, he would not roll back Indigenous treaty legislation.

This was despite facing pressure from his LNP party grassroots to do so.

However On 19 October 2023, a few days after the 2023 Australian Indigenous Voice referendum Crisafulli announced the LNP will be dropping its support for Treaty.

Crisafulli lives in Hope Island with his wife Tegan and their two children.

He owns a cane farm near Ingham.

He is a supporter of the North Queensland Cowboys rugby league club.