Melissa Price Net Worth 2022, Age, Husband, Daughter, Height, Family, Salary

Melissa Price net worth

Read the complete write-up of Melissa Price net worth, age, husband, children, height, family, parents, is she married, party as well as other information you need to know.

Introduction

Melissa Price is an Australian politician who has been serving as the Minister for Defence Industry since May 2019 and as the Minister for Science and Technology in the Morrison Government since October 2021. She has been a member of the House of Representatives since 2013, representing the Division of Durack in Western Australia for the Liberal Party. She previously served as Minister for the Environment (2018–2019) and Assistant Minister for the Environment (2017–2018).

Early life

NameMelissa Price
Net Worth$4 million
OccupationPolitician
Height1.68m
Ageage 58 years
Melissa Price net worth 2022

Melissa Lee Price Dellar was born on December 12, 1963 (age 58 years) in Kalgoorlie, Western Australia. She is the youngest of four children born to Lyn Blurton and Ray Dellar, who worked in the mining industry. Her father campaigned for the Australian Labor Party (ALP) and her grandfather David Dellar and uncle Stan Dellar both represented the ALP in the Western Australian Legislative Council.

Price was educated in Kalgoorlie at St Mary’s Catholic Primary School and Prendiville Catholic Girls College. She left school at the age of 15. In her maiden speech to parliament, she stated that she “enjoyed working in the hospitality and insurance industries, and also in management in the fast-food industry, the grains industry, and the mining industry. I was even an aerobics instructor at one point in my history”. Price attended university as a mature-age student, graduating with the degree of Bachelor of Laws from London South Bank University and completing a graduate diploma in law at the University of Western Australia.

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She was a solicitor in private practice from 1997 to 2002. She subsequently worked at grain cooperative CBH Group as general counsel and business development manager until 2008, and then at iron ore miner Crosslands Resources as vice-president of legal and business development until 2012. Price was also a non-executive director of the Cancer Council of Western Australia and the BrightSpark Foundation until 2016.

Career

Melissa Price unsuccessfully contested the state seat of Kalgoorlie at the March 2013 state election. In July 2013 she won Liberal preselection for the federal seat of Durack, following the retirement of the incumbent MP Barry Haase. She retained Durack for the Liberals at the September 2013 federal election, with the Nationals candidate Shane van Styn finishing second on the two-candidate-preferred count.

Price served on the speaker’s panel from 2015 to 2016 and was chair of the House of Representatives standing committee on indigenous affairs from 2016 to 2017. She was re-elected at the 2016 federal election, despite being challenged for Liberal preselection by geolog ist and global warming denier David Archibald. Price is a member of the Centre-Right faction of the Liberal Party.

In December 2017, Price was appointed Assistant Minister for the Environment in the Turnbull Government, under environment minister Josh Frydenberg. During the 2018 Liberal leadership spills, she reportedly voted for incumbent prime minister Malcolm Turnbull against Peter Dutton in the first vote. She told the Australian Financial Review that “a change of leader would be political suicide”. Following Turnbull’s withdrawal, she voted for Scott Morrison against Dutton in a second vote days later. Price was subsequently appointed Minister for the Environment in the Morrison Government and elevated to the cabinet.

As environment minister, Price attended the 2018 United Nations Climate Change Conference in Poland. The Australian reported that she had met with state environment ministers prior to the conference and proposed a strategy that “would put the onus on the states to lead environmental policy”, but that she “failed to secure agreement on a national action plan on climate change yesterday after the states rejected the wording”. In March 2019, Price attributed bushfires in Western Australia and Victoria to climate change. In the lead-up to the 2019 federal election, she was “front and center of Scott Morrison’s push to highlight his government’s environmental records and policies including a $3.3bn Climate Solutions Fund and a commitment to Snowy Hydro 2.0”.

In April 2019, Price gave ministerial approval to an environmental management plan for the Adani Group’s controversial Carmichael coal mine in Queensland. Her final approval came several days after she was advised by her department to approve the plan, delayed in order to seek further detail about the mine’s impact on groundwater. As a result “a delegation of Queensland MPs and the Prime Minister met over concerns that Ms. Price was refusing to sign off on the plan in the face of intense lobbying by federal Liberal MPs in Victoria”. A few days later, Price gave ministerial approval to the Yeelirrie uranium mine in Western Australia. She had previously stated that she would wait for the outcome of a Supreme Court of Western Australia case on state government approval of the mine before granting her own approval.

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Following the Coalition’s re-election at the 2019 federal election, Melissa Price was removed from cabinet but retained in the outer ministry as Minister for Defence Industry. This was widely reported as a demotion, with the Australian Financial Review stating that she had been “unable to comfortably answer media questions about her portfolio”. In her first speech in the portfolio, delivered to an Australian Industry Group meeting, she stated that she wanted to “maximise the involvement and success of Australian SMEs” in the defence industry. In March 2021, Morrison reappointed Price to cabinet, seeking to increase the proportion of women in the wake of sexual misconduct allegations. She was appointed to the Naval Shipbuilding Enterprise Governance Committee, a subcommittee of the National Security Committee.

Husband

Melissa Price was married to longtime husband Colyn, they had their wedding in 1900s in a private ceremony. Her husband Colyn died in 2002 of melanoma. The couple had one daughter, Rhiannon, who died in 2013 at the age of 18. As of 2015 Price was in a relationship with Brad Bell, a quantity surveyor, who has two children from a prior marriage. As of 2019 Price lived in Geraldton, having “recently moved” after previously living outside of her electorate in the Perth suburb of Marmion.

Melissa Price net worth

How much is Melissa Price worth? Melissa Price net worth is estimated at around $4 million. Her main source of income is from her career as a politician. Her salary for 2022 ranges from $162,574 to $475,483, but with bonuses, benefits and various other compensation, she made significantly more than her salary in the year 2020. Price successful career has earned him some luxurious lifestyles and some fancy cars trips. She is one of the richest and influential politicians in Australia. However, Melissa Price caused controversy in her role as Environment Minister by allegedly telling Anote Tong, the former president of Kiribati and climate change advocate, “I know why you’re here. It is for the cash. For the Pacific, it’s always about the cash. I have my chequebook here. How much do you want?”