Barrie John Unsworth (born 16 April 1934) is an Australian former politician, representing the Labor Party in the Parliament of New South Wales from 1978 to 1991. He served as the 36th Premier from July 1986 to March 1988. Since the death of Steele Hall on 10 June 2024, Unsworth is the oldest living premier of an Australian state.

Early years

Unsworth, the son of Joseph and Olive Unsworth, was born in Dubbo, New South Wales, and educated in Sydney, at Kogarah High School. On leaving school at age 15, he was apprenticed as an electrical fitter. In 1955, aged 21 years, he married Pauline Hennessy and they subsequently had one daughter and three sons, one of whom has died; he and his wife have nine grandchildren, and two great-grandsons. Unsworth was initially an Apprentice Electrical Fitter, then Electrical Fitter, Electrical Testing Officer and subsequently Sales Representative for Sydney County Council from 1950 until 1960.

Unsworth had a brief period of military national service in 1953–1954 in the Royal Australian Navy (RAN).

During his career as an elected union official, Unsworth was appointed by the Wran Labor NSW Government to a range of positions on government bodies including:

  • Public Transport Commission of New South Wales, Commissioner (1972–1975)
  • Pipeline Authority, Member (1973–1978)

While working in the union movement Unsworth worked for the United States of America in what a historian has called "a discreet relationship".

Political career

thumb|left|Unsworth in 1972.

Unsworth was elected a member of the New South Wales Legislative Council in 1978. While serving in the Legislative Council, he represented Australia as a delegate at the International Labour Organization (ILO) Worker Participation in Management Conferences held in Geneva (1980) and The Hague (1981).

In the Wran Labor Government, Unsworth was Minister for Transport (1984–1986) and Minister for Health (February–July 1986).

After the surprise retirement of Premier Neville Wran in May 1986, Unsworth became leader of the NSW Labor Party and thus Premier, and was also Minister for Ethnic Affairs and Minister for State Development. As Premiers are required by convention to be members of the Legislative Assembly, Brian Bannon, the member for the normally safe Labor seat of Rockdale, resigned to accept a government job as Chairman of the Homebush States Sport Centre Trust, and Unsworth contested the resulting by-election held on 2 August 1986. He only narrowly won the seat, with a 17.1% dive in the primary vote and hostile independent preferences giving him a margin of just 54 votes.

Unlike several of his predecessors including Wran, Unsworth chose not to be his own Treasurer.

Unsworth was Premier for two years

Following the election of the Carr Labor Government in 1995, Unsworth was placed on a number of key government and community bodies, including:

  • Australia Day Council of New South Wales, Chairman (1995–2003)
  • Totalizator Agency Board, Director (1997–2004)
  • Delta Electricity, Director (1997–2006)
  • New South Wales Centenary of Federation Committee, Chairman (1997–2002)
  • Tempo Services, Director (1999–2005)
  • Ambulance Service of New South Wales, Chairman (2001–2008)
  • RailCorp, Director (2005–2008)
  • State Transit Authority, Chairman (November 2004 to November 2009) In 2008 he headed a committee that considered the privatisation of the New South Wales' electricity industry. The committee and Unsworth supported the sale.

Unsworth lives in the Northern Beaches where he has participated in community campaigns to stop overdevelopment in NSW. He also led the effort to purchase and preserve the former home of Gough Whitlam as a historic site which would be open to the public.

References