Born in Cairns, Queensland, Prowse was educated at the Royal Melbourne Institute of Technology where he graduated with an Associate Diploma in Electrical Engineering and worked as an electrical fitter and mechanic, and later as an electrical engineer with the Royal Australian Air Force. Prowse rose through the Air Force ranks to become an Engineer Officer (Instrumentation) before retiring with the rank of Squadron Leader after twenty years service.[2] Prowse retrained as a naturopath and rose to political prominence as an anti-water fluoridation activist.[3]
Prowse was elected on a ticket of No Self-Government, he was ultimately successful, along with three other candidates of the Party. On 3 December 1989, Prowse, together with Duby and Maher formed the Independents Group. However, Prowse left this group on 31 July 1990 and sat out the remainder of his term as a member of the Liberal Party.[2][4] At the first meeting of the Legislative Assembly, held on 11 May 1989, some eight weeks after the election, following the swearing in of the elected members, the next item of business was the election of a Presiding Officer. Following a ballot of members of the Assembly, Prowse was elected as the Presiding Officer. The Assembly subsequently resolved that the title of the Presiding Officer be Speaker of the Australian Capital Territory Legislative Assembly.[5] Prowse held this title during the term of his first Assembly;[2] and did not seek re-election at the 1992 general election.[6]
During his term in office, Prowse travelled to Thailand where he was bitten by a holiday resort monkey; and later told a press conference he feared that he might have contracted the rabies virus.[7]
References
^Louttit, Anne; Louttit, John (1989). Who's Who in Canberra. C.E.S.L. Support Services Pty Ltd. p. A-158. ISSN1032-710X.