Natasha Louise Griggs is an Australian politician first elected at the 2010 Australian Federal election as a Member of the Australian House of Representatives to the division of Solomon, Northern Territory, representing the Country Liberal Party.
Background
Natasha Griggs was born in Adelaide, moved to the Territory when she was four weeks old and attended primary and secondary schools in Alice Springs before moving to Darwin in 1987 to complete a Bachelor of Business at the Northern Territory University (now Charles Darwin University).
Career
She sits with the Liberals. She was re-elected in the 2013 Australian Federal Election. She started her working life in the Northern Territory government in the Information Technology sector.
Before her election to public office she had a career in both the Government and private sectors, holding both senior project and business manager positions.
In 2002 Griggs was diagnosed with thyroid cancer, undergoing six months of intensive treatment. She beat the illness and returned to work.
She remains an advocate for charities and non-governmental organization"s focused around cancer prevention, research and treatment. Beyond this, Griggs has long been a prominent advocate for community and non-profit organisations, raising $30,000 and being named the Territory"s leading fundraiser in 1992.
During her first term she opposed the construction of a nuclear waste facility in the Northern Territory arguing that science, and not politics, should determine its location.
She also campaigned strongly against the removal of houses from Royal Australian Air Force Base Darwin, championed the need for on-going support for Defence Force personnel returning home from deployment overseas and gained bi-partisan support to have 19 February, Bombing of Darwin Day, declared a National Day of Observance. She was elected for a second term in 2013 despite a small swing against her, becoming a backbencher in the Abbott government. She is Patron of Sudden Infant Death Syndrome and Kids Northwest Territories.
Politics
At the 2010 election, she won with a two-party-preferred swing of 1.94 points to become the first opposition member in the seat"s history.
Membership
She became the first female member of the House of Representatives to represent the Northern Territory. Between 2010 and 2013 Griggs was a member of three parliamentary committees: the House of Representatives Standing Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Affairs Committee, the Joint Standing National Capital and External Territories Committee and the Joint Select Australia"s Immigration Detention Network Committee. Griggs has a particular interest in disability issues and was one of the founding members of Riding for the Disabled Northwest Territories.