Geoffrey David Walsh AO is an Australian political and business adviser.
Educated at Caulfield Grammar School and La Trobe University, Walsh worked as a journalist for the Border Mail , Herald Sun , The Age and Australian Financial Review before serving as an advisor to Australian Labor Party politicians Bob Hawke and Paul Keating during their terms as Prime Minister of Australia. He became a diplomat, working for the International Labour Organization in the United Nations Office at Geneva and later as the Australia Consul-General to Hong Kong. He worked as the National Secretary of the Australian Labor Party from 2000 to 2003 overseeing the 2001 federal election campaign. [1] He then spent over two years as a government relations consultant.
In 2005, he was made an Officer of the Order of Australia, "for service to politics as National Secretary of the Australian Labor Party and to the community in the areas of tertiary education and promoting closer ties between Australia and Hong Kong". [2]
Walsh was appointed Chief of Staff to Premier of Victoria Steve Bracks in September 2006. In 2007 BHP Billiton appointed Walsh as Director of Public Affairs [3] he later became special advisor to Marius Kloppers, the former CEO of BHP. [4]
He currently serves as the founding Executive Chairman of the Melbourne based York Park Group. [5]
The Government of the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region, commonly known as the Hong Kong Government or HKSAR Government, refers to the executive authorities of Hong Kong SAR. It was formed on 1 July 1997 in accordance with the Sino-British Joint Declaration of 1983, an international treaty lodged at the United Nations. This government replaced the former British Hong Kong Government (1842–1997). The Chief Executive also nominates principal officials for appointment by the State Council of the People's Republic of China. The Government Secretariat is headed by the Chief Secretary of Hong Kong, who is the most senior principal official of the Government. The Chief Secretary and the other secretaries jointly oversee the administration of the SAR, give advice to the Chief Executive as members of the Executive Council, and are accountable for their actions and policies to the Chief Executive and the Legislative Council.
BHP, formerly known as BHP Billiton is an Australian multinational mining, metals and petroleum public company headquartered in Melbourne, Victoria, Australia.
Jacques A. Nasser is a Lebanese Australian American business executive and philanthropist. Known for a management career at Ford Motor Company spanning several decades and continents, from 1999 to 2001 he served as Ford's CEO and president. He subsequently was a partner at One Equity Partners (JPMorgan), as well as on the boards of British Sky Broadcasting and Brambles Limited. Also previously on the international advisory council of Allianz Aktiengeselischaft and Chairman of the Australian mining company BHP Billiton from 2010 to 2017, Smart Company named Nasser No. 6 on a 2012 list of the "most powerful people in Australian boardrooms."
George Yeo Yong-Boon is a Singaporean business executive, former brigadier-general and politician currently serving as chairman and executive director of Kerry Logistics Network.
David Raymond Morgan is an Australian businessman. He has been respectively managing director, executive chairman and chairman of J.C. Flowers & Co. in charge of Europe and Asia Pacific since December 2009. He also serves on the firm's Management Committee. He was previously a chairman of J.C. Flowers (Australia) Pty Limited and a global operating partner of JC Flowers & Co. LLC.
Marius Jacques Kloppers is a South African-born Australian businessman and former CEO of BHP Billiton, the world's largest mining company. He was also Executive Director and Chairman of the Group Management Committee from 2007 to 2013. He was asked to retire as CEO on 1 October 2013, and was succeeded by Andrew Mackenzie.
Julian Fletcher Grill is an Australian former politician. Grill was a member of the Parliament of Western Australia between 1977 and 2001.
Gary Gray, former Australian politician and Australia's ambassador to Ireland, was the Australian Labor Party (ALP) representative for the Division of Brand in Western Australia in the Australian House of Representatives from 2007 to 2016. On 25 March 2013, Gray was appointed to the Australian Cabinet as the Minister for Resources and Energy, the Minister for Tourism and the Minister for Small Business. From 2010 until 2013, Gray served as the Special Minister of State for the Public Service and Integrity.
Harvey David Mathew Combe was National Secretary of the Australian Labor Party (ALP), a political consultant and lobbyist, an Australian Trade Commissioner, a Senior Vice-President International of Southcorp Wines, and a consultant to the Australian wine industry. He achieved a degree of unwanted prominence through the Combe-Ivanov affair of 1983.
David Andrew Newington Epstein is an Australian public affairs specialist, company director and corporate adviser who is Chair of Communications Compliance Limited, an independent consumer compliance monitoring body for the telecommunications industry.
Philip S. Aiken is an Australian business executive.
Xia Baolong is a Chinese politician. Originally from Tianjin, Xia began his political career in the Communist Youth League. He served as the vice mayor of Tianjin, governor and Communist Party Secretary of Zhejiang province. Since 2018, he has served as a vice chairman of the 13th Chinese People's Political Consultative Conference (CPPCC) and secretary general. He has a doctoral degree in Economics. Xia was appointed director of the Hong Kong and Macau Affairs Office in February 2020.
George Bernard Wright is an Australian trade unionist who served as the 10th National Secretary of the Australian Labor Party. He currently works in the private sector.
Kym Winter-Dewhirst was a senior South Australian public servant, former mining industry professional and political lobbyist. He was appointed to the role of Chief Executive Department of the Premier & Cabinet in the Government of South Australia in January 2015, where he became the highest paid public sector employee in South Australia's history. He was previously employed as Vice-President of Coal at mining company, BHP Billiton, and had worked extensively on the Olympic Dam mine expansion project as an employee of Western Mining Corporation prior to 2005 and BHP Billiton thereafter.
The Australia-China Council (ACC) is a long-standing institution in the Australia-China bilateral relationship. ACC was established by the Government of Australia in 1978 to promote mutual understanding and foster people-to-people relations between Australia and China. ACC combines the cross-sectoral bilateral expertise and advisory capacity of an independent Board appointed by the Minister for Foreign Affairs with the policy-making and management base in the Department of Foreign Affairs & Trade. By the time of the ACC's fortieth anniversary in 2018, it had "funded over 2,600 projects at a value of more than $23 million".
Richard Yeeles in an English-born Australian businessman and former senior South Australian public servant with interests in the resources sector, particularly uranium mining and processing.
Ronald Redvers Loveday was a South Australian politician who represented the South Australian House of Assembly seat of Whyalla from 1956 to 1970 for the Labor Party. He was a wheat-grower and union director prior to joining the Parliament. He was the Minister for Education in the Walsh government, and was responsible for the overhaul of many of the old policies of the 33-year old Liberal and Country League Playford government, reforming South Australian education.
Sir Charles Geoffry Shield Follows was a British colonial administrator. He was the Financial Secretary of Hong Kong from 1946 to 1951.
Henry Robert Butters was a Scottish colonial civil servant. He was the first Labour Officer of Hong Kong and Financial Secretary of Hong Kong from 1939 to 1941.