Linda Reynolds Net Worth 2022, Age, Partner, Husband, Children, Height, Family, Salary

Linda Reynolds net worth

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

Introduction

Linda Reynolds is an Australian politician serving as Minister for Government Services and Minister for the National Disability Insurance Scheme since 2021. She is a member of the Liberal Party and has served as a Senator for Western Australia since 2014. Before entering parliament Reynolds was a member of the Australian Army Reserve for nearly 30 years and was the first woman in the reserve to attain the rank of brigadier.

Reynolds was initially elected to the Senate at the 2013 federal election, but the result was voided and she was re-elected at a supplementary election in 2014. In the Morrison Government she has served as Assistant Minister for Home Affairs (2018–2019), Minister for Defence Industry (2019), Emergency Management and North Queensland Recovery (2019), Defence (2019–2021), Government Services (2021–present), and the National Disability Insurance Scheme (2021–present).

Early life

NameLinda Reynolds
Net Worth$4 million
OccupationPolitician
Height1.68m
Age56 years
Linda Reynolds net worth 2022

Linda Karen Reynolds CSC was born on May 16, 1965 (age 56 years) in Perth, Australia. She is the daughter of Laith and Jan Reynolds and has two brothers; she has said she was raised with “strong Christian values”. Her grandfather Alfred Reynolds served in the Parliament of Western Australia as a member of the Australian Labor Party (ALP). Her maternal grandparents were English immigrants.

Reynolds grew up in the suburb of Gooseberry Hill and attended St Brigid’s College. During her childhood, she lived in Indonesia for a period where her father was a manager for Philips. The family learned to speak Indonesian and her mother took a degree in Indonesian studies.

Reynolds holds the degree of Bachelor of Commerce from Curtin University and also holds graduate certificates in training and development (Southern Cross University), defense management (University of Canberra), and strategic studies (Australian Defence College).

Career

Linda Reynolds enlisted in the Australian Army Reserve in 1984, aged 19. She served variously as an officer cadet, regional logistics officer, training development officer, military instructor at the Army Command and Staff College, commanding officer of the 5th Combat Service Support Battalion, director of the Active-Standby Staff Group, project director at the Canberra Deep Space Communications Complex, strategy development director of Raytheon Australia, director of the Accountability Model Implementation Project, and director of the Army Strategic Reform Program.

Reynolds was adjutant general of the Army Reserve from 2012 to 2013. She was awarded the Conspicuous Service Cross in the 2011 Australia Day Honours for “outstanding achievement as the Director of Army Strategic Reform Program coordination”. On attaining the rank of brigadier in 2012, Reynolds became the first woman in the Australian Army Reserve to be promoted to a star rank.

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She joined the Liberal Party in 1987. Prior to her election to parliament, she held various positions in the party’s organizational wing. She was a campaign manager for the divisions of Pearce and Hasluck and served as a deputy federal director from 2006 to 2008. She also worked as an electorate officer and ministerial advisor, notably as chief of staff and senior adviser to justice minister Chris Ellison from 2001 to 2003. Prior to 2014, she had mentored political leaders from Thailand, Papua New Guinea, Iraq, Afghanistan, and Pakistan.

Linda Reynolds was elected to the Senate at the 2013 federal election from the third position on the Liberal Party’s ticket in Western Australia. However, her position was placed in doubt when the High Court ordered a fresh half-Senate election after determining that there were missing ballot papers. Reynolds was successful in the re-run and her Senate term commenced on 1 July 2014. She was subsequently re-elected to the Senate at the 2016 federal election and the 2019 federal election, leading the Liberal Party’s ticket in the latter. She chaired a number of Senate committees prior to her elevation to the ministry in 2018.

Reynolds is a member of the Moderate/Modern Liberal faction of the Liberal Party. During the 2018 Liberal Party of Australia leadership spills, Reynolds reportedly supported the incumbent prime minister Malcolm Turnbull in the first ballot on 21 August before switching her support to Scott Morrison in the second ballot on 24 August. On 23 August, she told the Senate that she was “distressed and disturbed” by the behavior of some Liberal MPs during the leadership conflict, which had “no place in my party or this chamber”.

Government minister

Linda Reynolds was appointed Assistant Minister for Home Affairs in the First Morrison Ministry, serving under Peter Dutton in August 2018. She was elevated to Cabinet in March 2019 as Minister for Defence Industry, as part of a planned transition to the role of Minister for Defence following Christopher Pyne’s decision to retire at the 2019 federal election.

Reynolds was also appointed to the new role of Minister for Emergency Management and North Queensland Recovery, having previously held responsibility for disaster recovery in the Assistant Minister for Home Affairs position. In early 2019, she was a strong opponent of the medevac bill that expanded the medical evacuation of asylum seekers from offshore processing facilities to Australia. In a speech to the Senate, she said that the bill would encourage unauthorized arrivals by boat and that as a result, the military would “have to recover the bloated corpses of babies and women mauled by sharks”.

She was appointed Minister for Defence in May 2019, following the Coalition’s vic tory at the 2019 federal election, the second woman to hold the position after Marise Payne. Her appointment was cautiously welcomed by Neil James, the president of the Australian Defence Association, who noted her lack of ministerial experience. In May 2020, Reynolds was accused of misleading the Senate by Mark Sullivan, the chair of the Defence Honours and Awards Appeal Tribunal, over her rejection of a posthumous Victoria Cross for Australia for Teddy Sheean.

Alleged rape between staff

In February 2021, reports emerged that a junior staffer had allegedly been raped in 2019 by an advisor to Linda Reynolds in the then Senator’s office late at night. Reynolds faced pressure to reveal what she had known about the incident. The alleged assailant was sacked days after the incident for a “security breach.” Reynolds did not provide a reference but did not say whether his termination payout was withheld.

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Prime Minister Scott Morrison publicly rebuked Reynolds for not telling him of the incident. Reynolds was due to address the National Press Club on 24 February, but it was announced that day that she had taken indefinite medical leave related to a pre-existing condition. Her medical leave was extended on 7 March for another four weeks to 2 April.

In March 2021, it was reported that Reynolds had called the above-mentioned junior member of parliamentary staff a “lying cow” in the presence of her own staff at Parliament House Canberra. Lawyers representing the junior staff member demanded a public apology. Reynolds issued an apology for the comment, saying the comments were not over the rape allegation.

Husband

Linda Reynolds is married to her longtime partner Robert Reid, they had their wedding in the 1900s. Her husband was a former Australian Medical Association communications director by profession. The couple has children and she stands with an appealing height and has a good bodyweight that suits her personality. However, in March 2021, Reynolds was demoted to Minister for Government Services and Minister for the National Disability Insurance Scheme.

Linda Reynolds net worth

How much is Linda Reynolds worth? Linda Reynolds 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. Reynolds successful career has earned him some luxurious lifestyles and some fancy cars trips. She is one of the richest and most influential politicians in Australia.