Andrew Broad


Andrew John Broad is a former Australian politician who represented Mallee in the Australian House of Representatives from 2013 to 2019 as a member of The Nationals. He was Assistant Minister to the Deputy Prime Minister from September 2018 until December 2018. He did not run in the seat of Mallee at the Federal election in May 2019.

Career

Broad is a former President of the Victorian Farmers' Federation, Director of the National Farmers Federation and Director of Australian Made. A small business owner, Broad operated his wheat and sheep farm for 16 years from the age of 22. In 2006 Broad completed a Nuffield Scholarship, travelling to over 40 countries to advance his knowledge of best practice canola production, exploring biotechnology, agronomic advances and new grower techniques.
Broad is a former Chair of the House of Representatives Standing Committee on the Environment and Energy, and former Co-Chair of the Parliamentary Friends of UNICEF, and member of the Parliamentarians Against Family Violence group. Broad is also a former member of the Coalition Backbench Committee on Agriculture and the Coalition Backbench Committee on Trade and Investment.
Broad's political interests included small business measures, domestic gas reservation policy, water policy, primary producer tax concessions, school chaplaincy, domestic violence, illicit drug abuse, greater support for children with type 1 diabetes, drought policy and increases in foreign aid.
Broad was a very strong critic of his own government cuts to foreign aid, arguing that a prosperous country such as Australia should not turn its back on its obligations to others less fortunate.
Since leaving the Australian Parliament, Andrew Broad has travelled Australia and North America extensively and continued a successful career in business.

Resignation and retirement

In December 2018, New Idea reported that Broad had used a "seeking arrangements" website to meet a younger woman. However in response to the report, Broad stated that the woman making the allegations "may have engaged in criminal activity," and that he had referred the matter to the Australian Federal Police.
Broad resigned from the ministry on 17 December 2018 as a result of the scandal. Subsequently, Deputy Prime Minister Michael McCormack revealed that he was aware of the allegations two weeks prior to them being published.
The Australian Federal Police said in a statement on 17 December that it had received and "assessed the information provided" by Broad, but that "no applicable offences under Australian law have been identified as any offence was outside Australia’s jurisdiction". In addition, the agency stated that it had received the referral from Broad on 8 November. Broad reimbursed the costs of two flights between Mildura and Melbourne, charged to his Parliamentary account, for when he flew to Hong Kong, and did not recontest the seat of Mallee at the 2019 election. In March 2019 Broad gave his final speech in the parliament outlining his achievements, and stating his desire to spend more time with his wife and daughter. He said he had made a "dumb mistake" in using the website and that politics had "made him not as nice a person".