Bob Cheek

Australian politician (born 1944)


title: "Bob Cheek" type: doc version: 1 created: 2026-02-28 author: "Wikipedia contributors" status: active scope: public tags: ["members-of-the-tasmanian-house-of-assembly", "liberal-party-of-australia-members-of-the-parliament-of-tasmania", "clarence-football-club-players", "penguin-football-club-players", "australian-sportsperson-politicians", "australian-rules-footballers-from-tasmania", "1944-births", "living-people", "leaders-of-the-opposition-in-tasmania", "21st-century-australian-politicians"] description: "Australian politician (born 1944)" topic_path: "geography/australia" source: "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bob_Cheek" license: "CC BY-SA 4.0" wikipedia_page_id: 0 wikipedia_revision_id: 0

::summary Australian politician (born 1944) ::

::data[format=table title="Infobox officeholder"]

FieldValue
nameBob Cheek
officeLeader of the Opposition
term_start20 August 2001
term_end20 July 2002
predecessorSue Napier
successorRene Hidding
constituency_AM1Denison
assembly1Tasmanian House of
term_start124 February 1996
term_end120 July 2002
birth_nameRobert Reginald Cheek
birth_date
birth_placeLaunceston, Tasmania, Australia
death_date
nationalityAustralian
partyLiberal Party
occupationJournalist
::

| honorific_prefix = | name = Bob Cheek | honorific_suffix = | image = | alt = | caption = | office = Leader of the Opposition | term_start = 20 August 2001 | term_end = 20 July 2002 | predecessor = Sue Napier | successor = Rene Hidding | constituency_AM1 = Denison | assembly1 = Tasmanian House of | term_start1 = 24 February 1996 | term_end1 = 20 July 2002 | birth_name = Robert Reginald Cheek | birth_date = | birth_place = Launceston, Tasmania, Australia | death_date =
| death_place = | death_cause = | resting_place = | resting_place_coordinates = | citizenship = | nationality = Australian | party = Liberal Party | education = | alma_mater = | occupation = Journalist | profession = Robert Reginald Cheek (born 13 May 1944 in Launceston, Tasmania) was leader of the Opposition Tasmanian Liberal Party from 20 August 2001 until he lost his seat in the July 2002 election. It was the first time that a major party leader was unsuccessful in a Tasmanian election since 1903.

Cheek was first elected to Tasmanian parliament at the 1996 election in the Denison electorate. Prior to entering politics he managed a number of business interests and worked as a journalist for The Mercury as well as editing The Sunday Tasmanian.

Cheek first challenged for Liberal leadership in 1999 running against Sue Napier, he failed to win support and lost 9–2. In 2001, Cheek challenged Napier for the leadership, her support was divided amongst party members and she eventually decided to step aside in favour of him. Rene Hidding became leader after his electoral defeat.

He married Stephanie Spencer and had three children.

Prior to becoming a politician, Cheek played Australian rules football in Tasmania for Clarence.

Cheek founded and managed a successful 24-hour gym chain, Zap Fitness, which expanded to 37 clubs in Tasmania, Victoria, and South Australia. In December 2017, Cheek agreed to sell the chain to the Fitness and Lifestyle Group for over $50 million.

References

Bibliography

References

  1. "Archived copy".
  2. (13 December 2017). "Former Tasmanian Liberal leader sells gym chain for $50 million". The Examiner.

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members-of-the-tasmanian-house-of-assemblyliberal-party-of-australia-members-of-the-parliament-of-tasmaniaclarence-football-club-playerspenguin-football-club-playersaustralian-sportsperson-politiciansaustralian-rules-footballers-from-tasmania1944-birthsliving-peopleleaders-of-the-opposition-in-tasmania21st-century-australian-politicians