In 1974 Connolly was selected as the Liberal candidate for the very safe seat of Bradfield on the retirement of the then member, Harry Turner. He was elected to the Australian House of Representatives, and held the seat until 1996, when he was defeated for preselection by future Liberal leader Brendan Nelson. In government he was chairman of the Parliamentary Public Accounts Committee between 1975 and 1983 and awarded a fellowship (FCPA) by the Australian Society of Accountants. In Opposition he was a shadow minister continuously up to his retirement. His major policy work was in superannuation, foreign relations and social policy. It has been speculated that without his pre-selection defeat he would have become a minister after the Coalition's massive win in 1996.[1]
Later life
Before serving as Australia's High Commissioner to South Africa between 1998 and 2002 with accreditation to Botswana, Lesotho and Swaziland, he was appointed an adviser to the first multi-ethnic South African Parliament by the Commonwealth Secretariat, Connolly later developed a close relationship with Nelson Mandela and accompanied him to Australia as a guest of the Howard government.
[2][3] Later he was a board member of ARIA, the Commonwealth's superannuation fund, and Chairman of Rice Warner Actuaries.
In the 2002 Queen's Birthday Honours (Australia), Connolly was made a Member of the Order of Australia for "service to the Parliament of Australia, to the development of superannuation policy reform, to international relations, and to the community".[4]
Recent works
In June 2022 he published Sunshine and Shade, a memoir of his childhood in Sri Lanka and his political and diplomatic life.(ATF Press)