This data was produced by OpenAustralia from a variety of sources.
Carol Berry MP

- Australian Labor Party Representative for Whitlam
- Entered House of Representatives on 3 May 2025 — Federal election
- Email me whenever Carol Berry speaks (no more than once per day)
Most recent appearances in parliament
- Matters of Public Importance: Fuel (24 Mar 2026)
“Labor has always been a party that cares deeply about the impacts of toughening economic conditions on those who are impacted the most. This is fundamental to our cause as a party. As the opposition has shown, it's easy to be reactive, to trot out an empty slogan or to misrepresent the facts to score cheap political points. What's harder and requires more sophistication is to pull the right...”
- Statements by Members: De La Hunty, Mr Bob, OAM (23 Mar 2026)
“I rise today to recognise Bob De La Hunty, who is President, Chief Pilot and a Life Member of the Historical Aircraft Restoration Society, which is known as HARS. It's located at Shellharbour Airport in my electorate of Whitlam. HARS is a not-for-profit organisation run by volunteers. It operates an award-winning aviation museum that is admired around the world as well as the Australian...”
- Questions without Notice: Middle East (23 Mar 2026)
“My question is to the Prime Minister. Can the Prime Minister update the house on the impact of the war in the Middle East and outline the action being taken to boost Australia's fuel security and supply?”
Numbers
Please note that numbers do not measure quality. Also, Representatives may do other things not currently covered by this site. (More about this)
- Has spoken in 36 debates in the last year — below average amongst Representatives.
- People have made 0 comments on this Representative's speeches — average amongst Representatives.
- This Representative's speeches are understandable to an average 19–20 year old, going by the Flesch-Kincaid Grade Level score.
- 0 people are tracking whenever this Representative speaks — email me whenever Carol Berry speaks.
- Has used three-word alliterative phrases (e.g. "she sells seashells") 18 times in debates — well below average amongst Representatives. (Why is this here?)