Mark Birrell

Mark Alexander Birrell (born 7 February 1958) is a solicitor, company director and a former Cabinet Minister in the Australian state of Victoria.

Early life

Birrell was born in Melbourne and was educated at Trinity Grammar. He studied at Monash University obtaining a Bachelor of Economics and a Bachelor of Laws. While studying, Birrell worked for Senator Alan Missen and also served terms as President of the Victorian and Federal Young Liberals. He was admitted to practice as a Barrister and Solicitor in 1983.[1]

Politics

When long serving MP William Campbell resigned his safe Legislative Council seat of East Yarra Province in 1983, Birrell won Liberal preselection and succeeded him as its member. Two years later he entered the shadow Cabinet as shadow Health Minister.[1]

Birrell became the Leader of the Liberal Party in the Legislative Council from 1988 and in 1992 he became the Government Leader of the Upper House, a position he would hold through to 1999. During this period he served as Minister for Conservation and Environment,[1] creating the Yarra Ranges National Park, pioneering laws for coastal protection in the State, overseeing Albert Park's revitalisation, and handling key stakeholder issues.

During the first term of the Kennett government he also served as the Minister for Major Projects.[1] He was responsible for the 'Agenda 21' infrastructure projects like the new Melbourne Exhibition and Convention Centre, Melbourne Museum, City Circle Tram, the Regent Theatre, Docklands, Beacon Cove and the Melbourne Sports and Aquatic Centre. After the 1996 election he swapped his Ministerial portfolios for the Industry, Science and Technology portfolio. As minister he oversaw the State's first "Science, Engineering and Technology policy," legislating for 7-day shop trading, and overseeing a successful investment attraction program.[1]

After the defeat of the Kennett Government at the 1999 election, Birrell continued as Liberal Upper House leader and served as shadow Minister for Industry, Science and Technology. Widespread media commentary called for him to switch to the lower house and take the Leadership of the Victorian Liberal Party as his predecessor Sir Rupert Hamer had done. However, Birrell decided to leave Parliament and return to private enterprise after the 2002 election.[1]

In private enterprise

Birrell is currently practising as a solicitor in Melbourne and is the Chairman of Infrastructure Partnerships Australia, the nation's peak infrastructure advocacy body. He is also the independent non-executive Chairman of the Australian Payments Council, the strategic coordination body for the Australian payments industry. He is on the Board of Australia Post,[2] is a member of the Australian Institute of Company Directors and serves on the Board of the Victorian Employers' Chamber of Commerce and Industry. He is the Chairman of the Port of Melbourne Corporation. He had previously held positions as a Trustee of both the Melbourne Cricket Ground (1992–96) and the Melbourne and Olympic Parks Trust (1995–99).[1][3]

gollark: Or also emulate Android apps on it, but oh potatOS the resource waste.
gollark: Or, well, use it on my laptop.
gollark: I can just not use Discord. Problem solved!
gollark: Anyway, the battery life will be *great* if I can cut down basically every pointless background service and have a GNU/Linux-running phone which basically just runs a browser and basic phone-network functionality.
gollark: Well, that's interesting, thanks.

References

  1. "Birrell, Mark Alexander". re-member. Parliament of Victoria. Retrieved 2 February 2010.
  2. "Board of directors". Australia Post. Retrieved 2 February 2010.
  3. "Infrastructure Australia". lgfocus.com.au. Retrieved 2 February 2010.
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