Background
She was born in Adelaide and was educated at the Firbank Girls" Grammar School in Melbourne, Flinders University and the Australian National University.
She was born in Adelaide and was educated at the Firbank Girls" Grammar School in Melbourne, Flinders University and the Australian National University.
Flinders University.
Hawker was abolished ahead of the 1993 federal election. Most of its territory, including Glenelg, was absorbed into neighbouring Hindmarsh, and Gallus opted to follow most of her constituents there. Hindmarsh had long been a Labor stronghold, but had grown increasingly marginal over the last decade.
A redistribution ahead of the election reduced Labor"s already thin majority to an extremely marginal 1.2 percent.
Additionally, the election was called at a bad time for the state Labor government, which was still reeling from the collapse of the State Bank of South Australia. Indeed, the state Labor government would be heavily defeated at a state election later that year.
To date, it is also the only time that Labor has been in government without holding Hindmarsh. The controversy over the Hindmarsh Island bridge was believed to have cost Tickner his seat at the 1996 election.
Despite this she was not picked for a place in the ministry by new Liberal Prime Minister John Howard.
Gallus did, however, become Parliamentary Secretary to the Minister for Reconciliation and Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Affairs in 2001 and Parliamentary Secretary to the Minister for Foreign Affairs 2001-2004. Gallus gained a large swing in the 1996 election, technically making Hindmarsh a safe Liberal seat. However, she had to withstand strong challenges from Labor"s Steve Georganas in the next two elections.
Gallus retired at the 2004 election and was replaced as the Liberal candidate by Simon Birmingham, who lost the seat to Georganas by just 108 votes.
She was a researcher with the South Australian Health Commission, an advertising executive, journalist and small business director before entering politics. Gallus was first elected to the seat of Hawker, based on Glenelg, at the 1990 election, defeating one-term Labor incumbent Elizabeth Harvey on a razor-edge 50.01 percent two-party vote from a 1.2 percent two-party swing.