Sunday Territorian

Who is Natasha Fyles?

- ZIZI AVERILL

THIRTY years ago a 15year-old Territory teen wrote her name on a party sign-up form.

On Friday she used that same hand to swear in as the next Chief Minister.

Natasha Fyles has been living in the public spotlight for the last decade, but behind the scenes the mother-of-two former teacher has become a powerful force within the

Labor Party.

The daughter of two teachers, Ms

Fyles worked as a physical education teacher at St Mary’s Primary School before becoming the Executive Director of Royal Life Saving Society NT.

Following the retirement of Nightcliff’s Jane Aagaard, Ms Fyles was able to retain the safe Labor seat with a 9 per cent majority, allowing her to take up a seat in opposition in 2012. Over a decade Ms Fyles has turned the northern suburbs electorate into the safest seat in the Territory, with a comfortabl­e 24 per cent majority in the 2020 election.

Ms Fyles has served in critical portfolios in government, including her current role as Health Minister and as Attorney-General in her second term.

Following the 2020 Labor victory Ms Fyles took on more than six portfolios, cementing her role as a critical political player.

Ms Fyles’s political career has not been without scandal.

As Racing Minister she oversaw the handling of the $12m Darwin Turf Club grandstand grant, which was later the subject of an ICAC investigat­ion

Ms Fyles has received both praise and anger over her management of the pandemic as both the Health Minister and National Resilience Minister.

Criticisms of the government’s handling of the pandemic have been widespread, ranging from tourism and hospitalit­y operators to Aboriginal and community health — not to mention anti-vaxxers.

As the Health Minister Ms Fyles has copped much of the abuse over the pandemic policies.

During a bizarre court procedure in April Ms Fyles

was served with nearlyl 100 Notice of Appeal documents over the proposed extension to the Covid emergency powers.

While often overshadow­ed by Mr Gunner for major announceme­nts for the pandemic, Ms Fyles proved herself a sturdy operator in the daily press scrum.

Ms Fyles also oversaw the Health Ministry during a period of chronic understaff­ing.

In February Royal Darwin Hospital went into a Code Yellow, indicating a pending emergency due to

the pandemic and a lack of staff.

As Leader of Government Business Ms Fyles has been a keen and tactical operator, often using Labor’s majority to stop debate much to the Opposition’s frustratio­n.

She currently sits on the Privileges, Standing Orders, Standing Committee on the ICAC parliament­ary committees.

Ms Fyles was selected as the Territory’s fourth most powerful woman, behind Attorney-General Selena Uibo and her speculated leadership rival Nicole

Manison.

Away from the parliament­ary chaos, Ms Fyles has dealt with her own family challenges.

Two years into her first term, Ms Fyles spoke about the anguish after her twoyear-old son Henry was diagnosed with a rare spinal cord tumour.

The toddler was the youngest child to ever be diagnosed with an Intramedul­lary Spinal Cord Glioma/ Astrocytom­a Tumor, with the family needing to fly to America for the lifesaving treatment.

 ?? ?? Newly appointed Chief Minis ter Natasha
Fyles, with her par tner Paul Archbold and sons Ollie and Henr y. Picture:
(A)manda Parkinson
Newly appointed Chief Minis ter Natasha Fyles, with her par tner Paul Archbold and sons Ollie and Henr y. Picture: (A)manda Parkinson

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