Bob Katter
Politician
A computed proxy from disclosed records (donations, meetings, lobbying presence, flagged gaps), not a measure of wrongdoing. Counts are a disclosed floor, drawn only from published records we have ingested.
Records here are drawn from ingested public datasets; per-record source links are still being attached (source link pending). Coverage
Authoritative public profile from Wikidata (CC0) and Wikipedia. Links below are the source.
Robert Bellarmine Carl Katter is an Australian politician. He has been the member of Parliament (MP) for the Queensland division of Kennedy since 1993 and is the father of the House, being the longest-serving member of the Australian Parliament. Prior to federal politics, Katter was prominent in Queensland state politics, serving as a minister in the Bjelke-Petersen, Ahern, and Cooper governments.
Family ties recorded in Wikidata. A fact about the public record, linked to their entity page where we hold one.
Roles this person held, from the public record. Dates are the disclosed floor: the span a source states (e.g. the first to last diary meeting hosted under a portfolio), not necessarily the full term.
The Commonwealth has no mandatory ministerial-diary scheme (unlike NSW, Victoria, Queensland and the ACT, which compel state ministers to publish who they meet).
We have not yet confirmed whether this politician voluntarily publishes a diary. We are checking federal members over time; this status updates as coverage grows.
Shareholdings, directorships and organisational memberships from the Register of Members' Interests. Where a company or organisation also appears in our graph as a donor or federal contractor, that overlap is flagged, a fact about disclosed records to scrutinise, not a finding of wrongdoing.
No social accounts indexed for this entity yet. LinkedIn, X, Facebook and Instagram profiles are indexed on demand from public data. Open this entity from search to queue an index, and the accounts, recent posts and the people they post with will appear here.
Each dot is an organisation or person; lines are disclosed ties, heavier for money and structure. Bigger dots have more connections. Click a dot to re-centre the map on it. Scroll to zoom, drag to pan.