Michael Craig Berkman (born 13 March 1981) is an Australian politician and the member for Maiwar in Brisbane's inner-west. Berkman has been the member for Maiwar since the 2017 Queensland state elections, when he became the first Greens member to be elected to the Legislative Assembly of Queensland.[2][3] He is the first member for Maiwar, after the electorate was created from the merger of the former Indooroopilly and Mt Coot-tha electorates.[4]
Berkman was born in Brisbane, Queensland. His father worked in the media and his mother had trained as a secondary school teacher. He grew up in Toowoomba, Queensland after the family moved there when Michael was 3 years old. Berkman attended Wilsonton State School and Toowoomba State High School.
In 2018, Berkman introduced a private member's bill to ban all political donations from businesses to state and local government politicians, candidates and parties, excluding charities and employee or employer organisations. Berkman said the community overwhelmingly supported reform to get big money out of politics. "People feel like Labor and the LNP are just not listening to them, and it's not hard to see why," Berkman said. "This is just more evidence that Labor and the LNP are completely wedded to their corporate donors." The Crime and Corruption Commission did not support the bill; however, Commissioner Alan MacSporran said it was his personal view that in an ideal world all donations would be banned.[13]
Climate rally
In November 2018, Berkman said schools in Maiwar, Berkman's electorate, should allow students to attend climate change events during school hours. According to Berkman, all school principals agreed. The flagship rally took place on 30 November.[14] Over 400 students attended, demanding climate action from the Australian Government and Queensland Government.[15]
Human rights and penal system
In 2018, Berkman called for investigations into Facebook comments from prison officers which advocated for extrajudicial violence against detainees.[16] In 2021, he proposed a bill that would raise the age of the age of criminal responsibility, which was defeated by four votes in 2022.[17]
Berkman has opposed youth crime bills that would override the Human Rights Act and make breach of bail by juvenile offenders a criminal offence.[18] In March 2023, during the debate on the youth crime bill, he tabled claims of human rights abuses that had allegedly occurred at the Brisbane Watch House.[19]
Personal life
Berkman is married with three children and lives in Bardon.[20]