Jim Cairns

Jim Cairns
Cairns in 1976
Deputy Prime Minister of Australia
In office
12 June 1974 – 2 July 1975
Prime MinisterGough Whitlam
Preceded byLance Barnard
Succeeded byFrank Crean
Treasurer of Australia
In office
11 December 1974 – 6 June 1975
Prime MinisterGough Whitlam
Preceded byFrank Crean
Succeeded byBill Hayden
Minister for the Environment
In office
6 June 1975 – 2 July 1975
Prime MinisterGough Whitlam
Preceded byMoss Cass
Succeeded byGough Whitlam
Minister for Overseas Trade
In office
19 December 1972 – 11 December 1974
Prime MinisterGough Whitlam
Preceded byGough Whitlam
Succeeded byFrank Crean
Minister for Secondary Industry
In office
19 December 1972 – 9 October 1973
Prime MinisterGough Whitlam
Preceded byGough Whitlam
Succeeded byKep Enderby
Deputy Leader of the Labor Party
In office
12 June 1974 – 2 July 1975
LeaderGough Whitlam
Preceded byLance Barnard
Succeeded byFrank Crean
Member of the Australian Parliament
for Yarra
In office
10 December 1955 – 25 October 1969
Preceded byStan Keon
Succeeded byDivision abolished
Member of the Australian Parliament
for Lalor
In office
25 October 1969 – 10 November 1977
Preceded byMervyn Lee
Succeeded byBarry Jones
Personal details
Born
James Ford Cairns

(1914-10-04)4 October 1914
Carlton, Victoria, Australia
Died12 October 2003(2003-10-12) (aged 89)
Narre Warren East, Victoria, Australia
Political partyAustralian Labor Party
SpouseGwen Robb
Alma materUniversity of Melbourne
OccupationPoliceman, lecturer

James Ford Cairns (4 October 1914 – 12 October 2003) was an Australian politician who was prominent in the Labor movement through the 1960s and 1970s, and was briefly Treasurer and the fourth deputy prime minister of Australia, both in the Whitlam government. He is best remembered as a leader of the movement against Australian involvement in the Vietnam War, for his affair with Junie Morosi and for his later renunciation of conventional politics. He was also an economist, and a prolific writer on economic and social issues, many of them self-published and self-marketed at stalls he ran across Australia after his retirement.


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