Peter Frederick Morris, the first Australian federal minister of Greek heritage, has died aged 94.
Born in Sydney in 1932, Morris was the son of a migrant from Symi, Jimmy Morris, who anglicised his name from Agapitos Montiadis and ran a coffee shop in Newcastle. After finishing his education, Morris worked in both Canberra and Newcastle before entering public life.
He became involved with the Labor Party in the mid-1960s, served on Newcastle City Council from 1968, and was elected to federal parliament in 1972 as the member for Shortland, a seat he held until 1998.
Morris joined the Hawke government in 1983 as Minister for Transport and later held additional portfolios.
In 1992, as chair of the government’s Standing Committee on Transport, Communications and Infrastructure, he delivered the landmark “Ships of Shame” report, exposing unsafe practices in the shipping industry and recommending tighter oversight at national and international levels.

Public service extended through his family, with his brother Allan Morris and son Matthew also serving in federal parliament.
Prime Minister Anthony Albanese said Morris played a defining role in the Hawke era.
“Peter Morris was one of the reasons we look back on the Hawke government with such fondness and admiration,” he said.
“As the MP for Shortland and as a minister, Peter’s work was always guided by Labor values and his deep humanity. When I was Minister for Transport, Peter was a source of sound and constructive advice on shipping, aviation, regulatory reform and regional economic development. He was one of those people who gave heart to our movement. In the process, he helped improve life in the Hunter region and across Australia.”