Executive

Ged Kearney - President

Gerardine (Ged) Kearney commenced as ACTU President on 1 July 2010, and is the third woman to hold the position following the departure of Sharan Burrow to the Brussels-based position of General Secretary of the International Trade Union Confederation.

Ged believes that unions should not just be concerned with the experience of people at work but they should be advocates for change to improve all aspects of Australians lives. She wants to ensure that unions continue to be at the forefront of public debate in Australia.

Ged’s ambition as ACTU President is to build respect from political leaders and the broad community for the values of fairness and role played by unions in delivering social change so that people feel the need to join.

Ged was elected the Federal Secretary of the Australian Nursing Federation in April 2008. The ANF represents more than 175,000 nurses and midwives, and is one of Australia’s fastest growing unions.

She had been an elected official with the ANF since 1997, also serving as Assistant Federal Secretary, Federal President and Victorian Branch President.

She is a director of the HESTA Super Fund. Ged became a registered nurse in 1985, and has worked in many settings across the public and private acute sectors, predominantly in Melbourne, and has also been a nursing educator, including manager of the Clinical Nursing Education Department at Austin Health. She has a Bachelor in Education.

As Federal Secretary, Ged saw substantial membership growth of the ANF and the first national combined strategic growth campaign in the private sector aged care industry. Her background in nursing and industrial experience advanced the profession and industrial rights of ANF members.

In collaboration with ANF branches in every state and territory, Ged has worked to improve the working lives and conditions of dedicated nurses, midwives and assistants in nursing throughout Australia.

The second youngest of nine children, Ged grew up in the inner Melbourne suburb of Richmond, where her father was a publican. She was brought up in a household where the importance of the collective, both in politics and society, was emphasised from an early age.

The year after qualifying as a registered nurse, she took part in the famous Victorian nurses’ strike of 1986 which resulted in substantial improvements to pay and conditions.

Ged is a mother of four children aged from 16 to 23, and lives in Melbourne.

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Jeff Lawrence - Secretary
Since his election as Secretary of the Australian Council of Trade Unions in August 2007, Jeff Lawrence has steered the union movement in a new direction under a Labor Government.

Under his stewardship, the ACTU was a key negotiator in the drafting of the Fair Work Act, which features a guaranteed safety net of rights and conditions, improved protection from unfair dismissal, the abolition of Australian Workplace Agreements, an independent umpire, and rights to collective bargaining.


Jeff has devoted his entire career to advancing the interests of working Australians, particularly the low-paid.

Prior to joining the ACTU, he headed one of Australia’s largest unions – the Liquor Hospitality and Miscellaneous Union (LHMU), a union with more than 130,000 members in the service, contract, childcare, aged care and health industries.

Under his leadership, the union reversed the decline in membership, achieving modest growth against the wider trend.

After coming to the ACTU, Jeff joined with ACTU President Sharan Burrow to co-ordinate the Your Rights at Work campaign against the Howard Government’s WorkChoices laws.

Among his achievements at the ACTU, in 2009 he helped broker a new set of government procurement guidelines that place greater emphasis on Australian jobs and workplace rights.

Unions under his watch have successfully advocated for economic stimulus measures to protect Australian jobs during the downturn.

Jeff was born in Newcastle in 1952, and has a degree in Arts/Law (Hons) from Sydney University.

His father Barry was a panel beater and auto mechanic and his mother Elaine a typist and stenographer.

He is married to Judith and lives in Melbourne.

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Tim Lyons - Assistant Secretary
Tim was elected to fill a casual vacancy as ACTU Assistant Secretary in August 2008 and was re-elected at the 2009 ACTU Congress.

Tim’s responsibilities as an ACTU Officer include management of the organising and growth agenda, union education programs and the corporate research/strategic campaigning capacity.

Tim represents the ACTU and unions at high-level meetings with government and business on both industrial issues and the broader policy agenda of Australian unions.  He is a member of the National Workplace Relations Consultative Council, the Committee on Industrial Legislation and the Global Unions Committee on Workers' Capital.  Tim is a trustee director of an industry superannuation fund and a director of the Union Education Foundation

Prior to the ACTU, Tim was an official of the National Union of Workers (NUW) for over 13 years, and represented members in a wide range of industries, including logistics, food, plastics, oil and gas and general manufacturing.

Tim’s positions at the NUW included senior advocate in the National Office, and industrial officer and organiser for the Victorian Branch, giving him wide exposure to enterprise bargaining and organising in the private sector.  His work as an industrial officer and advocate focused on bargaining and industrial action. Tim has extensive experience in industrial tribunals, including in appellate and test case proceedings.

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Michael Borowick - Assistant Secretary
Michael was elected an ACTU Assistant Secretary in November 2010.

Prior to his election, Michael was an official of The Australian Workers’ Union (and its predecessors) for 20 years, where he served as a Victoria Branch Assistant Secretary, and as a member of the AWU National Executive.

He serviced AWU members in several industries, including steel, glass, metal manufacturing, carpentry and joinery, building and construction, plastics, and chemical.

Michael is a qualified electrician, serving his apprenticeship in the building and construction industry. Throughout his working life, he has been a trade union member (AWU; Electrical Trades Union; and Australian Clerical Officers Association), and has been active in the Australian Labor Party. Michael believes that the interests of working people and their families are best served by strong and effective unions working in partnership with the ALP.

Among his ACTU responsibilities, Michael has carriage for both occupational health and safety, and workers compensation. Michael has been nominated by the ACTU as a member of the National Workplace Relations Consultative Council, and as a member of Safe Work Australia.

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Senior Vice President
Joe de Bruyn (SDA)

Vice Presidents
Susan Hopgood (AEU)
Paul Howes (AWU)
Kathy Jackson (HSU)
John Sutton (CFMEU)
Linda White (ASU)

Affiliated unions
Association of Hospital Pharmacists
Association of Professional Engineers, Scientists and Managers Australia
Australasian Meat Industry Employees Union
Australian & International Pilots Association
Australian Education Union
Australian Institute of Marine and Power Engineers
Australian Licenced Aircraft Engineers Association
Australian Manufacturing Workers Union
Australian Maritime Officers Union
Australian Nursing Federation
Australian Professional Footballers' Association
Australian Salaried Medical Officers Federation
Australian Services Union
Australian Workers' Union
Australian Writers' Guild
Blind Workers Union of Victoria
Breweries & Bottleyards Employees Industrial Union of Workers WA
Civil Air Operations Officers Association of Australia
Club Managers Association Australia
Communications, Electrical and Plumbing Union of Australia
Community and Public Sector Union - PSU Group
Community and Public Sector Union - SPSF Group
Construction, Forestry, Mining and Energy Union
Finance Sector Union
Flight Attendants Association of Australia - Domestic/Regional Division
Flight Attendants' Association of Australia - International Division
Funeral and Allied Industries Union of NSW
Health Services Union
Independent Education Union of Australia
Liquor, Hospitality and Miscellaneous Union
Maritime Union of Australia
Media, Entertainment & Arts Alliance
Medical Scientists Association of Victoria
National Tertiary Education Union
National Union of Workers
New South Wales Nurses' Association
Police Federation of Australia
Rail, Tram and Bus Union
Salaried Pharmacists Association of WA Union of Workers
Shop Distributive and Allied Employees Association
Textile, Clothing and Footwear Union of Australia
Transport Workers Union of Australia
Union of Christmas Island Workers
United Firefighters Union of Australia
Victorian Psychologists Association Incorporated
Western Australian Prison Officers' Union of Workers


Trade & Labor Councils
Queensland Council of Unions
Unions ACT
Unions NSW
Unions NT
Unions Tasmania
SA Unions
Unions WA
Victorian Trades Hall Council


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