Geoff Gallop

Geoff Gallop
Gallop at the Midland Railway Workshops in 2002
27th Premier of Western Australia
In office
10 February 2001 – 16 January 2006
MonarchElizabeth II
GovernorJohn Sanderson
DeputyEric Ripper
Preceded byRichard Court
Succeeded byAlan Carpenter
Leader of the Opposition
In office
8 October 1996 – 10 February 2001
PremierRichard Court
DeputyJim McGinty
Eric Ripper
Preceded byJim McGinty
Succeeded byRichard Court
Leader of the Western Australian
Labor Party
In office
8 October 1996 – 25 January 2006
Preceded byJim McGinty
Succeeded byAlan Carpenter
Member of the Western Australian Parliament
for Victoria Park
In office
7 June 1986 – 25 January 2006
Preceded byRon Davies
Succeeded byBen Wyatt
Personal details
Born
Geoffrey Ian Gallop

(1951-09-27) 27 September 1951 (age 72)
Geraldton, Western Australia, Australia
Political partyLabor Party
Spouse(s)
Beverly Diane Jones
(m. 1975; died 2009)

Ingrid van Beek
(m. 2010)
Children2
Alma materSt John's College, Oxford
Nuffield College, Oxford
University of Western Australia
ProfessionAcademic

Geoffrey Ian Gallop AC FASSA (born 27 September 1951) is an Australian academic and former politician who served as the 27th premier of Western Australia from 2001 to 2006. He is currently a professor and director of the Graduate School of Government at the University of Sydney and former chairman of the Australian Republican Movement.

Born in Geraldton, Western Australia, Gallop studied at the University of Western Australia, and later progressed to St John's College at the University of Oxford after winning a Rhodes Scholarship. Having joined the Labor Party in 1971, he served as a councillor for the City of Fremantle between 1983 and 1986, and was elected to the seat of Victoria Park in the Western Australian Legislative Assembly at the 1986 state election. Having held several portfolios in the preceding Lawrence Ministry (including Minister for Education), Gallop replaced Jim McGinty as Leader of the Opposition in 1996 following McGinty's resignation.

At the 1996 election, Labor was defeated by the incumbent Liberal Party led by Richard Court despite a rise in Labor's share of the vote, but he remained as the party's leader, and at the 2001 election Labor was elected to government, with Gallop becoming premier. Having successfully contested the 2005 election, Gallop resigned as Premier, Labor leader and from parliament in early 2006 to aid his recovery from depression, and was replaced by Alan Carpenter.


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