Tom Dadour
Dr Tom Dadour | |
|---|---|
Dadour in 1974 | |
| Member of the Western Australian Legislative Assembly | |
| In office 20 February 1971 – 8 February 1986 | |
| Preceded by | Hugh Guthrie |
| Succeeded by | Carmen Lawrence |
| Constituency | Subiaco |
| Subiaco City Councillor | |
| In office 1966–1978 | |
| Constituency | Central Ward |
| Personal details | |
| Born | Gabriel Thomas Dadour 19 April 1925 Waterloo, New South Wales, Australia |
| Died | 17 March 2011 (aged 85) Nedlands, Western Australia, Australia |
| Political party | Liberal (1970–1983) |
| Other political affiliations | Independent (from 1983) |
| Occupation | General practitioner |
Gabriel Thomas Dadour AM (19 April 1925 – 17 March 2011) was an Australian politician and doctor. He was a member of the Western Australian Legislative Assembly for Subiaco from February 1971 to February 1986, representing the Liberal Party until 1983, when he resigned from the party and became an independent. He was also a Subiaco City Councillor from 1966 to 1978. He was known for often voting against his own party in Parliament and speaking out against his party and its leader.
Born and raised in Sydney, Dadour served in the Royal Australian Naval Reserve from April 1945 to November 1946. He then completed a medical degree at the University of Sydney before moving to Perth to start his career as a general practitioner. He became involved with the Subiaco Football Club as a sports doctor. Dadour was elected to Parliament at the 1971 state election. He worked to have the state's Local Government Act amended to require a referendum for local government boundary changes. He was outspoken in his opposition to the 1979 closure of the Perth–Fremantle railway line by his own party, and in his support for a ban on tobacco advertising. He introduced a private member's bill to ban tobacco advertising, which passed the Legislative Assembly but was narrowly defeated in the Legislative Council. After announcing his retirement from politics at the 1986 state election, Dadour endorsed the Labor Party.