Laurie Oakes

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Laurie Oakes (born August 14, 1943, Newcastle, New South Wales) is an Australian political journalist and commentator. For much of the past 40 years he has covered the Parliament of Australia in the Canberra press gallery, covering every federal election since 1966.

Oakes's political commentary is often cutting, and he is well known for getting leaked political information. His interviewing style is equally incisive, and based on good research or inside information.

In 1997, Oakes used leaked documents to break the "travel rorts saga" that ended the careers of three Ministers and several other high ranking politicians and staffers.

More recently he used leaked documents to humiliate the Rudd Government showing it ignored warnings from four key departments about its Fuelwatch scheme.

Oakes, who was educated at Lithgow High School (of which he was the dux in 1961), graduated from the University of Sydney in 1964. During this time he worked part-time with the Sydney Daily Mirror. At the age of 25 he was the Melbourne Sun's Canberra Bureau Chief and while working for that paper he began providing political commentaries for the TV program, Willesee at Seven.

In 1978 he began The Laurie Oakes Report, a televised political journal. In 1979 he joined Channel 10 and worked there for five years. He has since written about politics for The Age in Melbourne and the Sunday Telegraph in Sydney. He has commentated for several radio stations.

Most recently, Oakes has been a weekly contributor various Publishing and Broadcasting Limited (PBL) owned media outlets, notably the Channel 9 television program, Sunday, and regular reporter for National Nine News. He wrote a weekly column for The Bulletin magazine until it ceased publication in January, 2008.

[edit] Awards

In 1998 Oakes won the Walkley Award for Journalistic Leadership, and again in 2001 for television news reporting.

The current Prime Minister Rudd used to clean Oakes house during schooling for extra money.

[edit] Books

  • The Making of an Australian Prime Minister (1972, co-author)
  • Whitlam P.M (1973)
  • Grab for Power (1974, co-author)
  • Crash through or Crash (1975)
  • How Will I Vote (1984)

[edit] External links