Edward Mandla
Edward Mandla (born 1963) is an Australian politician and businessman. He was a Councillor for the City of Sydney from 2012 to 2016.[1] His business career spans over two decades in the information technology and executive search industries. He is a former president of the Australian Computer Society[2] and currently sits on the board of directors of several companies and organizations.[3]
Edward Mandla | |
---|---|
City of Sydney Councillor | |
In office 2012–2016 | |
Personal details | |
Nationality | Australian |
Political party | Liberal Party |
Background
Mandla attended the University of New South Wales where he received a First Class Honours Degree in Commerce. He was awarded the first University Medal for Outstanding Academic Achievement in Information Systems and won the Datec Prize for his thesis on information systems techniques used for commercial applications.[1]
Business
Mandla is the founder and general manager of Mandlason Search, a recruitment and executive search firm.[1][4] He is on the Advisory Boards of tech company Seventeenhundred,[5] custom software development house Solentive, online dress retailer White Runway and fire safety solutions business Concept Safety Systems.[6] He is a former president of the Australian Computer Society, an association for technology professionals with over 22,000 members. The association made him an Honorary Life Member in 2007.[2][7] Mandla has also written columns for The Australian, The Sydney Morning Herald,[8] The Age[9] and The Daily Telegraph.[10]
Political career
In 2007 Mandla ran as the Liberal candidate for the seat of Sydney in the New South Wales state elections. He lost to incumbent Clover Moore but beat the Greens and Labor, providing the Liberal Party with its best result in twenty years.[11] He was the President of the Sydney City Branch of the Liberal Party from 2009 until he left the party in 2016.[3][12]
City of Sydney Councillor, 2012–2016
In July 2012, Mandla was preselected by the Liberal Party for its City of Sydney mayoral candidate over Christine Forster, sister to former Prime Minister (at the time, Federal opposition leader) Tony Abbott.[13][14] Mandla and Forster positioned themselves as an effective opposition to Lord Mayor Moore, who they claimed was concentrating too much on her vision of a "Sustainable Sydney" while losing track of practical problems, such as parking.[15] The party promised to decrease rates by 10% for businesses and residents, which would be funded by cutting capital spending by 250 million and making significant cuts to the council's 1,700 full-time staff.[16] On 8 September 2012, Moore was reelected Lord Mayor for her third term; however, Mandla received the second-highest number of votes, ensuring him the number two spot on the nine-person council.[17][18] Since taking office Councillor Mandla has challenged a number of Moore's policies.
Renewable energy
Mandla has called on the council to revise its target for a 70 percent greenhouse reduction by 2030, saying it's no longer achievable and is "misleading to the public."[19] He argued that the plan to roll out tri-generation power plants across the city was extremely complex and could leave ratepayers paying hundreds of millions of dollars.[20] He stressed that this was an ambitious scheme for the council to undertake and that exceptional risk and project management were necessary. He suggested the council evaluate gas price uncertainty and to consider alternatives.[21][22] Plans to construct a tri-generation plant at Green Square were eventually halted in June 2013 due to financial risk.[22][23]
Parking
Mandla aims to end what he has described as Sydney's "hatred of car ownership".[15] He has called for new housing developments to include at least one car space for each apartment.[16] He is also an advocate for 15-minute free parking throughout the city, which would benefit locals and promote what he described as "park local, buy local".[24]
Wild fires
In 2013, when wild fires destroyed hundreds of homes in New South Wales, Mandla convinced the council to increase its contribution to the Australian Red Cross NSW Disaster Relief from $100,000 to $200,000. He also criticized the green movement for cutting down on back burning, which in turn contributed to the damaging wild fire, and accused Moore of turning a speech on bush fire into a political statement on global warming.[25][26][27]
Business voting rights
In September 2014 the NSW state Parliament passed a bill granting businesses two votes while also making business voting compulsory.[28] Mandla was instrumental in getting the bill passed. He had been a proponent of business voting rights, arguing that businesses provided the bulk of rate revenues – about 80 percent – but were effectively denied a vote.[10] Previously, business voting was voluntary, but turnout was low and discouraged by an unwieldy system of yearly enrolment.[42] Mandla worked with Shooters MP Robert Borsak to help draft the bill, which was passed in September 2014 and was to take effect in the 2016 elections.[28][29]
Parking Rangers investigation
Following the death of a whistleblower, Mandla pressured Mayor Moore to release the full details of a secret investigation into allegations of bullying and harassment within Sydney's parking ranger unit. In May 2015 the whistleblower emailed Ms. Moore, City of Sydney CEO Monica Barone, and other officials to highlight plunging morale among colleagues, deteriorating mental health, high sick leave and staff turnover. Four weeks later the whistleblower died of a suspected suicide. The council knew of the misconduct allegations since at least 2012 when City of Sydney ordered an investigation into allegations of "bullying, harassment, coercion and intimidation". Councilor Mandla demanded Moore publicly release the results of the 2012 internal report and step aside until a full investigation be completed.[30][31]
2016 Sydney elections
In November 2015, Mandla announced that he would not run for Lord Mayor, citing the demands of his five board director roles and the upcoming birth of his seventh child as the reasons behind his decision. At the time he was presumed to be the frontrunner on the Liberal Party's ticket.[32] In July 2016, Mandla left the Liberal Party to run as the second candidate on independent councilor Angela Vithoulkas "Sydney Matters" ticket in the September 2016 council elections. Upon his exit from the party, Mandla was critical of the Liberals for being beholden to lobbyists and unelected officials. Vithoulkas and Mandla will contest incumbent Lord Mayor Clover Moore and Liberal candidate Christine Forster.[3]
Competitive weightlifting
Mandla weightlifts competitively for the NSW's Titans. He won Masters Division Championships in 2012, 2013, 2017, 2019 and currently holds the NSW Masters Division record for the snatch, clean and jerk and total. He won bronze at the World Cup in 2017. He holds a number of current Australian Masters records in the 55-59 102kg category including snatch 90kg, clean and jerk 108kg, and total 194kg. [33]
Personal life
He is married and has six children.
References
- "Councillor Edward Mandla,"City of Sidney website, retrieved 21 August 2016.
- Rob O'Neill, "This is your next job," The Age, 19 July 2005.
- Jacob Saulwick, "Former Liberal mayoral candidate Edward Mandla leaves 'party of lobbyists'," The Sydney Morning Herald, 29 July 2016.
- "The Mandlason Leadership Team,' Mandlason.com, retrieved 21 August 2016.
- "Who We Are," [http://www.seventeenhundred.com.au/ Seventeenhundred.com.au, retrieved 21 August 2016.
- "Advisory Board," Archived 18 September 2016 at the Wayback Machine Concept Safety Systems, retrieved 21 August 2016.
- "ACS Honorary Life Members," Archived 15 September 2016 at the Wayback Machine ACS.org, retrieved 21 August 2016.
- Edward Mandla, "Solutions developer working to unlock the hidden riches of business books on the web," The Sydney Morning Herald, 13 September 2007.
- Edward Mandla, "Search Needs Rescuing," The Age, 13 September 2007.
- Edward Mandla, "Very shady business indeed," The Daily Telegraph, 2 October 2013.
- "Liberal councillor Edward Mandla has his eye on Clover Moore’s job in 2016 and says it’s time for change," The Daily Telegraph, 25 September 2014.
- "Liberals announce candidate for Sydney Lord Mayor", Australian Broadcasting Corporation, 25 July 2012.
- "Tony Abbott's sister Christine Forster is beaten in Liberal Party preselection for the Sydney lord mayoralty," News.com.au Archived 9 October 2008 at the Wayback Machine, 25 July 2012.
- Linda Silmalis, "Tony Abbott bats for sister Christine Forster in council elections," The Sunday Telegraph, 26 August 2012.
- Ean Higgins, "Moore's in clover as candidates for Sydney's lord mayor flounder in her green-tinged wake," The Australian, 18 August 2012.
- "The Liberals," City of Sydney 2012 Elections, 29 June 2012.
- Linda Silmalis, "Clover is back for four Moore as mayor," The Sunday Telegraph, 8 September 2012.
- "2012 NSW Local Council Elections," Australian Broadcasting Corporation, 18 September 2012.
- Zilka Grogan, "City of Sydney can meet sustainability targets despite dumping trigeneration: Clover Moore," Wentworth Courier, 20 June 2013.
- Vikki Campion, "Off-the-grid Sydney plan is a waste of energy - and $2.7 million," The Daily Telegraph, 15 November 2012.
- Vikki Campion, "Sydney City Council debates trigeneration power scheme risks," The Daily Telegraph, 25 February 2013.
- Vikki Campion, "Clover Moore gas plan hot air," The Daily Telegraph, 12 June 2013.
- Vikki Campion, "Sydney City Council spent $8.1m researching shelved gas-fired tri-gen power precinct plan," The Daily Telegraph, 25 June 2013.
- Vikki Campion, "Free parking in Sydney feasibility on agenda," The Daily Telegraph, 16 October 2012.
- Vikki Campion, "'Mumbo jumbo' Lord Mayor Clover Moore jumps on the burning bandwagon", The Daily Telegraph, 22 October 2013.
- Vikki Campion, "Clover Moore accused of using bushfire donation speech as political statement on climate change," The Daily Telegraph, 21 October 2013.
- Peter Hackney, "City lends hand to bushfire victims", AltMedia, 24 October 2013.
- "The Battle for the City of Sydney," Australian Broadcasting Corporation, 5 October 2014.
- Nicole Hasham, "Alan Jones convinced government on voting policy: Shooters MP," The Sydney Morning Herald, 14 August 2014.
- "Sydney City ranger dies after blowing whistle on council’s dysfunctional parking rangers unit," The Daily Telegraph, 25 June 2015.
- "Leong Lim: Parking officer’s suspected suicide prompts government investigation of the City of Sydney council," The Daily Telegraph, 6 September 2015.
- Leesha McKenny, "Sydney lord mayor contender Edward Mandla bows out of race," The Sydney Morning Herald, 5 November 2015.
- "Lifter Details – Edward Mandla," Australian Weightlifting Federation’s website, retrieved 21 August 2016.