Mungo maccallum biography of barack obama

          Most Nato leaders have rejected Obama's appeals for extra troops and many - Canada, the Dutch - have pulled out.

        1. Most Nato leaders have rejected Obama's appeals for extra troops and many - Canada, the Dutch - have pulled out.
        2. A Tasmanian Rhodes scholar, he taught successively at the Universities of Oxford and Adelaide and became Professor of Political Theory and Institutions at.
        3. Coming from one born in in a comfortable, essentially conservative middle-class background, it was virtually unique.
        4. Mungo MacCallum was a political journalist and commentator.
        5. Mungo MacCallum is a political journalist and commentator.
        6. Coming from one born in in a comfortable, essentially conservative middle-class background, it was virtually unique..

          Mungo Wentworth MacCallum

          Australian political journalist (1941–2020)

          Mungo Wentworth MacCallum

          Born(1941-12-21)21 December 1941

          Sydney, New South Wales, Australia

          Died9 December 2020(2020-12-09) (aged 78)

          Ocean Shores, New South Wales, Australia

          Occupation(s)Political journalist and commentator
          SpouseJenny Garrett

          Mungo Wentworth MacCallum (21 December 1941[1] – 9 December 2020) was an Australian political journalist and commentator.

          MacCallum was once described by Gough Whitlam as a "tall, bearded descendant of lunatic aristocrats".[2] His father, Mungo Ballardie MacCallum (1913–1999), was a journalist and pioneer of television in Australia, and his great-grandfather, Sir Mungo MacCallum (1854-1942), had been a prominent scholar and university administrator.

          His mother, Diana Wentworth, was a great-granddaughter of the Australian explorer and politician William Charles Wentworth (1790–1872). Her brother, William Cha