Contents
- 1 Julie Bishop Age
- 2 Julie Bishop New Job
- 3 Julie Bishop Anu
- 4 Julie Bishop Malcolm Turnbull
- 5 Julie Bishop and David Panton
- 6 Julie Bishop Professional Career
- 7 Julie Bishop Political Positions
- 8 Julie Bishop Same-sex marriage
- 9 Julie Bishop Salary
- 10 Julie Bishop Net Worth
- 11 Julie Bishop Height and Weight
- 12 Julie Bishop Education
- 13 Julie Bishop Family
- 14 Julie Bishop Husband
Julie Bishop an Australian finest Ministers for Foreign Affairs. She got elected to the House of Representatives back in the year 1998 following a highly successful legal career.
She as well worked as Minister for Ageing; Cabinet-level Minister for Education, Science, and Training as well as the Minister supporting the Prime Minister on Women’s issues. She got to be the first woman to be elected as the Deputy Leader of the Liberal Party when elected to that position in the year 2007, which she held until 2018.
In addition to a slew of internationally acclaimed responses, resolutions and also as awards throughout her political career, she established the Innovation Xchange with a mandate of finding solutions to some of the most intractable development as well as health challenges globally. The Xchange has served with international organizations including Bloomberg Philanthropies as well as The Global Fund.
Julie Bishop Age
Bishop was born on 17 July 1956 in Lobethal, Australia.
Julie Bishop New Job
Bishop commenced her term as chancellor of the Australian National University On 1 January 2020. She is the first woman to be in this position.
Julie Bishop Anu
Following her retirement from political life, Bishop took up a position on the board of the professional services company Palladium. It was reported in early August 2019 that she had agreed to take up the position of chancellor of Australian National University (ANU), commencing in January 2020.
These meetings in Davos took place shortly after Bishop had taken up her position as Chancellor of the ANU. Bishop’s activities with Greensill in Davos were reportedly arranged “in the margins” of an ANU function for Australians as well as Australian businesses in Davos.
Julie Bishop Malcolm Turnbull
Bishop is regarded as being a moderate within the Liberal Party and has been described as holding similar views to Malcolm Turnbull. She has stated that she regards herself as a “very liberal-minded person”, an “economic dry and a social liberal”, and a “Menzian Liberal”.
Julie Bishop and David Panton
Bishop’s partner is Davis Panton, a pharmacist, and winemaker. Panton is a Managing Partner of Navigation Capital’s SPAC Operations Group, which makes equity investments in Special Purpose Acquisition Companies (SPACs).
The SPAC Operations team recruits CEOs to lead SPACs as well through its SPAC-in-a-Box operating system, powered by the NYSE, turns the SPAC process “Upside down and Inside out” (See “About Us” section for greater detail).
Julie Bishop Professional Career
Bishop joined Wallmans, an Adelaide-based law firm, as its first female articled clerk. She left after less than a year, in part due to an incident where a senior partner asked her to perform waitressing duties.
In the year 1982, aged 26, she became a partner in the firm of Mangan, Ey & Bishop. The following year, she married West Australian property developer Neil Gillon and moved to Perth.
On arriving in WA, Bishop joined Robinson Cox as a solicitor specializing in commercial litigation and was made a full partner in the year 1985.
According to Kerry Stokes, “in the legal profession she was a very determined, reasoned person (…) there’s not been much written about what a good executive Julie was—responsible for administering and running a partnership, not just a lawyer”.
In the late 1980s, Robinson Cox was hired by CSR Limited to defend against compensation claims brought by asbestos mining workers, who had contracted mesothelioma while working for Midalco, a subsidiary of CSR.
Bishop was part of the team assigned to the case, which developed an argument that a company was not legally responsible for the actions of its subsidiaries.
The Supreme Court of Western Australia eventually decided to pierce the corporate veil and hold CSR liable for Midalco’s actions; the lead litigant died before the conclusion of the case, which lasted eight months. After becoming a public figure, Bishop was accused by opponents of acting immorally by involving herself in the case.
She has said she conducted herself ethically and professionally, and in accordance with procedural advice given by barristers Robert French and David Malcolm (both future judges).
As a legal advisor to the Western Australian Development Corporation, Bishop assisted in the incorporation of several new government enterprises, including Gold Corporation (the operator of the Perth Mint), LandCorp, and Eventscorp (a division of Tourism Western Australia).
Robinson Cox merged into the larger firm of Clayton Utz in the year 1992, and she was made managing partner of the firm’s Perth office in 1994. In the same year, she took up an appointment as chair of the state government’s Town Planning Appeal Tribunal, serving a three-year term.
In 1996, Bishop attended Harvard Business School for eight weeks to complete the Advanced Management Program for senior managers. She has credited one of her lecturers there, George C. Lodge, with inspiring her to enter public life. In the year 1997, she was elected to the Senate of Murdoch University and appointed as a director of the Special Broadcasting Service (SBS).
Julie Bishop Political Positions
Bishop is regarded as being a moderate within the Liberal Party and has been described as holding similar views to Malcolm Turnbull. She has stated that she regards herself as a “very liberal-minded person”, an “economic dry and a social liberal”, and a “Menzian Liberal”.
Bishop is in favor of an Australian republic, having served as a delegate at the Constitutional Convention of 1998. When a conscience vote has been allowed by the Liberal Party, Bishop has always voted in a “progressive” manner, voting in favor of allowing stem cell research and for removing ministerial oversight of the abortion pill RU486.
Julie Bishop Same-sex marriage
During the internal debate on same-sex marriage which divided the Liberal Party in August 2015, Bishop refused to publicly declare her personal views on the matter.
However, her statement that she was “very liberally minded” on the topic was taken by many to be an allusion towards the support of same-sex marriage. In a television interview in November 2015, Bishop confirmed that she supported same-sex marriage.
In August 2015, Bishop spoke in favor of holding a plebiscite on the matter, believing that the issue should be put to a democratic vote so that it could no longer distract from the government’s policy agenda.
This ultimately became the policy adopted by the government. Following the postal plebiscite in the year 2017, which resulted in a “Yes” vote, Bishop stated that she had voted in support of same-sex marriage.
Julie Bishop Salary
Bishop earns an average annual salary of $75,000
Julie Bishop Net Worth
Bishop has an estimated net worth of $5 million
Julie Bishop Height and Weight
Bishop stands tall at a height of 5 feet 7 inches and weighs of 55 kg or (121 lbs).
Julie Bishop Education
Julie enrolled and later graduate with a Bachelor of Laws from the University of Adelaide in the year 1978 and studied Harvard Business School in the year 1996, completing the Advanced Management Program for Senior Managers. In 2017, the University of Adelaide earned her the Honorary Degree of Doctor of the University for her contribution to Australian parliamentary service.
Julie Bishop Family
Bishop was born to Isabel Mary (née Wilson) and Douglas Alan Bishop(father). She was raised up along with her two older sisters and a younger brother. Julie has described her parents as “classic Menzies Liberals”.
Her father was a returned soldier and an orchardist, while her mother’s family were sheep and wheat farmers. Both her mother and grandfather William Bishop and active in local government, working terms as mayor of the East Torrens District Council. She was raised on an apple and cherry orchard in Basket Range. The year prior to her birth sign, it was burned to the ground in the Black Sunday bushfires.
Julie Bishop Husband
Bishop was previously married to property developer Neil Gillon as of 1983 and divorced in 1988, taking his surname for the duration of the marriage.She then had relationships with Senator Ross Lightfoot and former Lord Mayor of Perth Peter Nattrass. Bishop does not have children.
In response to repeated media inquiries about the subject, she has stated that “I’m not having kids, there’s no point lamenting what was or what could have been”, and that she feels “incredibly lucky that I’ve had the kind of career that is so consuming that I don’t feel I have a void in my life”.