First elected at the
1993 election, Kanck's first speech in parliament was about the need for an environmentally sustainable level of population for Australia, and her first private member's bill was about the choosing and ongoing education of judges. Kanck twice introduced a bill for a Midwives Act, and during the course of debate on the
Nurses Act 1999 fought hard and successfully to retain a register of midwives separate from that of nurses. For her advocacy the SA Branch of the
Australian College of Midwives chose her for their inaugural Midwifery Advocate of the Year Award in 1999. On 14 March 2001 Kanck introduced her
Dignity in Dying Bill 2001 to the South Australian Parliament. The bill was drafted in large part by the South Australian Voluntary Euthanasia Society (SAVES), of which she has since been awarded life membership. She introduced the bill twice, and on the second occasion it passed the second reading vote, but failed at the third reading. In August 2006, Kanck ignored government requests not to discuss
suicide methods in a parliamentary speech on legalising voluntary
euthanasia. Although suppressed from the parliament's internet record by a narrowly resolved Legislative Council vote, the speech was published elsewhere. She is the first parliamentarian in Australia to have been censored in this way. In May 2006, she controversially advocated the
therapeutic use of
MDMA (identified in news media as "ecstasy" or "the base ingredient in ecstasy"). One of her final private members' bills in 2008 was a bill for the medical use of cannabis. in 2007. Kanck was successful in amending the Commission of Inquiry (Children in State Care)(Children on APY Lands) Bill 2004. The "
Mullighan Inquiry" (named after Commissioner
Ted Mulligan) into the
sexual abuse of children in state care and on the
Anangu Pitjantjatjara Yankunyjatjara lands made 54 recommendations for action in its final report, published in March 2008. Kanck's amendments required the government to respond within three months to indicate which of the recommendations they would implement, and then to table an annual report about that implementation for every year for the following five years after receipt of the report, a first in terms of causing action on a government-commissioned report on Aboriginal Affairs. During her time in parliament she served on the Social Development, Environment Resources & Development and Natural Resources Standing Committees, and numerous select committees, including chairing the Select Committee on the Impact of Peak Oil on South Australia which reported to the parliament late in 2008. Kanck was successful in moving a motion to refer the matter of
Multiple Chemical Sensitivity to the Social Development Committee. With a strong environmental focus in her politics she also succeeded in referring the matter of Marine Parks to the Environment Resources and Development Committee and actively campaigned against the Upper South-East Drylands Salinity Scheme during her time as a member of that Committee and the Natural Resources Committee. Kanck announced her resignation on 7 November 2008 with her resignation taking effect on 31 January 2009. The party membership selected
David Winderlich as her replacement in the Legislative Council. She stood as one of the
Candidates of the South Australian state election, 2010, in the third and unwinnable position in the list of
Australian Democrats Candidates for the Legislative Council. ==Post Parliament==