Bridget Archer


Bridget Kathleen Archer is an Australian politician who currently serves as a member of the Tasmanian House of Assembly for the Bass (state)|state division of Bass] since 2025. Archer was previously a member of the House of Representatives for the federal Division of Bass from 2019 to 2025.
Archer is a member of the Liberal Party. Since August 2025, she has served as a minister in the third Rockliff ministry.

Early life

Archer was born in Hobart, Tasmania, to a teenage mother. As a six-week-old baby, she was adopted by bank workers Barry and Marian Whelan, who already had a son and daughter. The Whelans separated when Archer was eight and she remained with her adoptive father. However, he died not long after, and Archer moved to Ravenswood, a suburb of Launceston, to live with her mother, who had remarried. Archer revealed that she was subjected to sexual abuse by her stepfather, whom she has described as "an aggressive, emotionally abusive and controlling alcoholic".
She attended Ravenswood Primary School but was then sent to board at Launceston Church Grammar School, only ten minutes from her home, on the insistence of her stepfather. The turmoil in her family life contributed to "misbehaviour and recklessness". She was expelled from Launceston Grammar, and failed Year 12. Despite that, she was admitted to the University of Tasmania, although she soon dropped out. She worked at the Tasmanian Herbarium from 1995 to 1999, as a botanical curator, and later worked in "a variety of mostly casual administrative and hospitality jobs", including at the 2000 Summer Olympics, before returning to university. She completed a Bachelor of Arts in English and political science, followed by a graduate certificate in international politics.

Local government

Archer was elected to the George Town Council in 2009. She served as deputy mayor from 2011 to 2014 and then as mayor until resigning in 2019 to enter federal politics.

Political career

Archer is a member of the moderate faction of the Liberal Party.

Federal Politics

In November 2018, Archer announced that she would run for Liberal preselection in Bass. She was elected to parliament at the 2019 federal election, which took place on her 44th birthday. She defeated the incumbent Australian Labor Party candidate Ross Hart.
In December 2020, Archer publicly criticised the Morrison government's trial of a cashless debit card to deliver welfare payments, stating that she would oppose its use within her own electorate and describing it as a "punitive measure enacted on the presumption that all welfare recipients within the trial areas are incapable of managing their finances and require the government's assistance". The House of Representatives passed legislation to make the card permanent by one vote, with Archer abstaining from voting despite her earlier criticism.
Archer has crossed the floor a number of times, including:
In November 2023, it was reported that there was a push by some Liberals for her to leave the party, with fellow northern Tasmanian MP Gavin Pearce supposedly an opponent.
In March 2024, she said that she felt marginalised within the Liberal Party, with fewer moderates around. She claimed that her views hadn't changed, but the party had shifted to the right, becoming "One Nation lite".
In the 2025 federal election she was defeated by Labor candidate Jess Teesdale.

State Politics

Archer served as secretary and treasurer of the Liberal Party's George Town branch from 2012 to 2013. Archer unsuccessfully contested the 2018 Tasmanian election.
Following her defeat at the previous federal election, Archer was elected to the state seat of Bass at the 2025 Tasmanian State election, gaining the most votes of any candidate in the division.
Archer was appointed Minister for Health, Mental Health and Wellbeing, Minister for Aboriginal Affairs and Minister for Aging in the Third Rockliff Ministry.

Personal life

Archer has five children with her husband Winston. After marrying, they moved to his family property outside George Town, where they farm sheep and beef cattle.