Nicholas Whitlam

Nicholas Richard Whitlam (born 6 December 1945) is an Australian businessman and corporate director. He is the son of former Prime Minister Gough Whitlam and Margaret Whitlam.

Nicholas Whitlam
Born
Nicholas Richard Whitlam

(1945-12-06) 6 December 1945
Alma materHarvard College (1967);
London Business School (1969)
Parent(s)Gough Whitlam;
Margaret Whitlam
Websitewww.nicholaswhitlam.com

Career

Whitlam first became publicly prominent in 1981 when he was appointed chief executive of the State Bank of New South Wales. Subsequent roles include Whitlam Turnbull & Co (an investment banking partnership with future Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull and former Premier of New South Wales Neville Wran), and the chairmanship of the NRMA Group. Whitlam was the key figure in the 2000 demutualization and listing of NRMA Insurance Limited, the country's largest insurance company, now known as Insurance Australia Group Limited (IAG).

In 2002, the Australian Securities and Investments Commission (ASIC), a corporate regulator, initiated controversial civil proceedings against Whitlam alleging breaches of his NRMA director's duties in relation to his not signing a proxy vote, containing of 3793 votes, directing him to vote against a motion about the remuneration of directors.[1] A single judge of the Supreme Court of New South Wales ruled that he had breached his duties as a director and banned him from being a director of any company for five years.[2][3] Whitlam appealed the judgement. Three senior judges, sitting as the New South Wales Court of Appeal, unanimously found that he had not breached his duties as a director, reversed the ruling and exonerated him. ASIC sought but was denied special leave to appeal by the High Court of Australia.[4][5]

Whitlam is a graduate of Harvard College (AB cum laude, 1967) and the London Business School (MSc, 1969).

He has served as Chairman of the Australian Graduate School of Management at the University of New South Wales, and has an honorary doctorate (Hon.DUniv) from that university and from Western Sydney University (Hon.DLitt).

Personal

Whitlam has been married to Judy (née Frye) since 1973; she was a publicist for Vidal Sassoon and the Savoy Hotel. Believing they were unable to conceive children of their own, they adopted a girl (Alice) from Thailand and a boy (Edward) from Colombia. Then Judy became pregnant, and their son (Peter) was born in 1982; he has severe mental and physical disabilities.[6]

gollark: CLEARLY it needs to have a built-in computer algebra system for this.
gollark: Yes. I would add functions if I *needed* them.
gollark: See, Minoteaur is technically public but entirely without support, so if I somehow need to change a thing, I'll just dump the database, manually edit the SQL dump, fix the migrations, make a new database, and load it back in.
gollark: It doesn't have a way to revert migrations because I never actually make mistakes.
gollark: Nim.

References

  1. Long, Stephen (15 August 2002). "Nicholas Whitlam barred from being a company director".
  2. http://www.allens.com.au/pubs/cg/cd2sep03.htm
  3. "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 25 November 2015. Retrieved 25 November 2015.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  4. Stephens, Tony (12 October 2004). "It's time to tell my side, says Nick Whitlam".
  5. http://www.allens.com.au/pubs/cg/cd2sep03.htm
  6. Richard Guilliatt, "Nick Whitlam: his part in his downfall", The Age, 23 November 2002, Good Weekend, p. 20



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