Jordon Steele-John
Jordon Alexander Steele-John is a British-born Australian politician and disability rights advocate. He is a Senator for Western Australia and a member of the Australian Greens.
He began his political career in 2013, and was elected by declaration to the Senate in 2017.
Steele-John holds the portfolios of Health, Disability Rights and Services, Foreign Affairs and Peace & Nuclear Disarmament for the Australian Greens.
Early life and career
Born in the United Kingdom, Steele-John immigrated as a child to Australia with his parents and grandparents. He and his brother were home-educated.He cites his upbringing and his parents as a major influence on his political standings.
Steele-John is a disability advocate who, as a student, campaigned for the Greens in both federal and state elections. He joined the Greens at age 16.
Steele-John studied politics at Macquarie University by correspondence. However, his appointment to the senate cut short his undergraduate studies.
Steele-John uses a wheelchair due to cerebral palsy. Steele-John renounced British citizenship at age eighteen in preparation for the 2013 federal election, and currently only holds Australian citizenship.
Political career
Prior to being listed as third senate candidate for the Greens in the 2016 federal election, Steele-John had been a candidate for the WA Greens three times. He was first a candidate at the age of 18. He was a candidate in the March 2013 state election in the electorate of Warnbro, the September 2013 federal election in the electorate of Fremantle and in the April 2014 special half-senate election which followed the result of the 2013 election being voided by the Court of Disputed Returns.Steele-John entered the Senate after Scott Ludlam was forced to resign when he was found to be a dual citizen and in contravention of section 44 of the Australian Constitution. On 27 October 2017, the High Court of Australia, sitting as the Court of Disputed Returns, ordered the Australian Electoral Commission to conduct a recount of senate ballots in Western Australia, and Steele-John was declared elected at age 23, making him the youngest sitting member in the Australian parliament. Steele-John was also the youngest senator in Australian history until the election of 21-year-old Charlotte Walker in 2025.
Steele-John was re-elected to the Senate at the 2019 federal election, securing 11.8% of the state's vote, with a swing of 1.48% in his favour.
Steele-John has previously held the Greens portfolios of Youth, Defence and Veterans’ Affairs, Digital Rights and I.T., Sustainable Cities, and Trade.
Steele-John has been on 9 Joint Standing Committees, 8 Senate Legislative and General Purpose Standing committees and 4 Senate Select committees including one as chair.
He is currently the co-chair of three Parliamentary Friendship Groups, the Parliamentary Friends of Mental Health, the Parliamentary Friends of Myalgic encephalomyelitis/chronic fatigue syndrome, and the Parliamentary Friends of the Treaty on the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons.
On 19 September 2023, Steele-John appeared on Kitchen Cabinet with Annabel Crabb, in which he speaks with Crabb about being the youngest senator, as well as his early life and progression into politics.
Political positions
Disability rights and services
In February 2018, Steele-John called for a Royal Commission into disabled prisoner abuse. In April 2018, Steele-John commented on Parliament House's need to become more wheelchair friendly.In 2019, Steele-John's campaigning successfully led to the establishment of the Royal Commission into Violence, Abuse, Neglect and Exploitation of People with Disability. After years of raising the alarm that the confidentiality provisions in the Disability Royal Commission are insufficient, in 2021 he helped secure amendments that protect people making confidential disclosures to the Royal Commission.
In 2020, Steele-John successfully campaigned for a compensation scheme for thalidomide survivors, and in 2021 pressured the government to abolish independent assessments in the NDIS. He continues to campaign to increase the Disability Support Pension and Carer Payment.
In 2023, Steele-John expressed his support for the expansion of ADHD diagnoses and treatments to more Australians. He cited the enormous stigmatisation of people with ADHD and the inaccessibility of the medication as motivating factors for this.