John Roskam
John Roskam is the executive director of the Institute of Public Affairs (IPA), a libertarian think tank based in Melbourne, Australia.
John Roskam | |
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John Roskam in 2015 | |
Personal details | |
Nationality | Australian |
Political party | Liberal Party |
Career
According to Roskam's byline on an opinion column in the Australian Financial Review, "during the 2001 federal election he worked on the Liberals' federal campaign". The Liberal Party is Australia's main conservative party. He has run for Liberal Party preselection and missed out.[1] Prior to his employment at the IPA, Roskam was the Executive Director of The Menzies Research Centre - a think tank for the Liberal Party - in Canberra. He has also taught political theory at the University of Melbourne and held positions as Chief of Staff to Dr David Kemp, the Federal Minister for Employment, Education, Training and Youth Affairs, as Senior Advisor to Don Hayward, Victorian Minister for Education in the first Kennett Government, and as Manager of Government and Corporate Affairs for Rio Tinto Group.[2]
With Gary Johns he has worked for the IPA - including on a contract with the federal government - to develop proposals to limit the role of nongovernmental organisations on public policy.
Free Speech Controversy in 2014
Despite positioning himself and the IPA as champions of free speech, John Roskam fired leading Australian energy economist Alan Moran from the IPA for comments he made on Twitter in relation to Islam.[3] The sacking was justified by Roskam having reference to the personal views of Moran, expressed publicly, on his personal Twitter account. Moran's departure followed a sustained campaign from renewable energy and green activists to have him fired because they disagreed with his views on energy policy. The dismissal of a senior employee from the IPA for their personal views laid Roskam and the IPA open to charges of hypocrisy in relation to free speech and has been viewed a high-profile capitulation to the politics of personal destruction.
Moran's sacking for speech offences followed shorty after Roskam also stood down IPA Research fellow Aaron Lane for satirical comments he had made years earlier on a micro-blogging site prior to employment with the organisation. In spite of Lane's remarks preceding his relationship with the IPA and being completely unrelated to his employment, Roskam opined that "What he did is entirely inappropriate. It's wrong".[4]
Notes
- Koutsoukis, Jason (18 June 2005). "Party faces choice: new blood or not". The Age. Retrieved 19 August 2016.
- "John Roskam". Institute of Public Affairs. Archived from the original on 31 August 2016. Retrieved 19 August 2016.
- "Alan Moran dumped by IPA – a lesson for Abbott?". www.theaustralian.com.au. 25 August 2014. Retrieved 19 December 2020.
- "Liberal candidate stood down over homophobic tweets". www.abc.net.au. 1 August 2014. Retrieved 19 December 2020.
External links
Non-profit organization positions | ||
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Preceded by Hon Dr Marlene Goldsmith |
Executive Director of Menzies Research Centre 2001-2002 |
Succeeded by Jason Bryant |
Preceded by Mike Nahan |
Executive Director of Institute of Public Affairs 2005-present |
Succeeded by incumbent |