Background
Vale, Danna was born on November 14, 1944 in Sydney, Australia.
Vale, Danna was born on November 14, 1944 in Sydney, Australia.
Bachelor, University Sydney. Bachelor of Laws, University Sydney.
She did not re-contest her seat at the 2010 federal election. From 1984 until 1988, Vale was a full-time wife, mother and student, studying arts and law at Sydney University. In 1988, she began practising as a solicitor and held this position until entering parliament.
Vale was first elected to the House of Representatives for Hughes, New South Wales in March 1996, re-elected in 1998, 2001, 2004 and 2007.
Following re-election in 2001, she was appointed Minister for Veterans" Affairs (26 November 2001 to 22 October 2004) and Minister Assisting the Minister for Defence (26 November 2001 to 29 September 2003). Vale was first elected in Hughes when she defeated the sitting ALP member and Aboriginal Affairs Minister Robert Tickner, a defeat that has been largely attributed to his handling of the Hindmarsh Island Bridge controversy.
Vale notably opposed several of the Howard Government"s policies and proposals, often on local issues, in particular the proposed construction of a second Sydney airport at Holsworthy and a nuclear waste processing plant at Lucas Heights, both of which would have been located in her electorate. In the government"s second term, she spoke against mandatory sentencing of juveniles in the Northern Territory.
In June 2009, Vale was one of four Liberal MPs to support a Labor move to abolish the practice of charging asylum seekers the cost of their detention.
The committee reported in August 2007. However, Vale was one of four MPs issuing a dissenting report in which they stated, "We do not believe the evidence unequivocally supports the hypothesis of anthropogenic global warming". Among the evidence cited in the dissenting report were claims of global warming on other planets including Mars, Jupiter, Pluto, Neptune and Triton (a moon of Neptune).
At the time, questions were being raised about the impartiality of David Flint, the head of the Australian Broadcasting Authority, when a letter of praise from Flint to Jones was revealed after the American Bar Association had cleared Jones of wrongdoing.
Vale"s letter, urging Jones to "stay brave and true", was lampooned by the American Broadcasting Company television program Media Watch, which adopted "Stay Brave and True" as its unofficial motto.
Vale was ridiculed in The Sydney Morning Herald and the local media for her views.
She was a member of the House of Representatives Standing Committee on Science and Innovation established to look at the technology of geosequestration of carbon dioxide.
Married; 4 children.