Minister for Industry and Trade
Minister for Enterprise, Investment and Trade | |
---|---|
since 5 August 2022 | |
Department of Enterprise, Investment and Trade | |
Style | The Honourable |
Nominator | Premier of New South Wales |
Appointer | Governor of New South Wales |
Inaugural holder | Carlo Lazzarini (as the Minister for State Industrial Enterprises) |
Formation | 10 October 1921 |
The Minister for Enterprise, Investment and Trade is a minister in the Government of New South Wales who has responsibilities for sponsoring and supporting enterprise, trade, and international investment in the state of New South Wales, Australia. The current Minister for Enterprise, Investment and Trade is Alister Henskens since 5 August 2022. The minister is responsible for administering the portfolio through the Enterprise, Investment and Trade cluster.[1]
Ultimately the minister is responsible to the Parliament of New South Wales.
History
In 1921 in the first Dooley ministry the portfolio of Labour and Industry was split into Labour and the new portfolio of State Industrial Enterprises.[2] State Industrial Enterprises became the responsibility of the Minister for Railways. The responsibilities included - building construction, metal quarries, monier pipeworks, docks and workshops.[3] The portfolio was abolished in 1925 in the first Lang ministry.
List of ministers
Enterprise, investment and trade
The following individuals have served as the Minister for Enterprise, Investment and Trade, or any precedent titles:
Ministerial title | Minister [2] | Party | Ministry | Term start | Term end | Time in office | Notes | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Minister for State Industrial Enterprises | Carlo Lazzarini | Labor | Dooley (1) | 10 October 1921 | 20 December 1921 | 71 days | ||
Minister for Business Undertakings | Stephen Perdriau | Nationalist | Fuller (1) | 20 December 1921 | 20 December 1921 | 7 hours | ||
Minister for State Industrial Enterprises | Carlo Lazzarini | Labor | Dooley (2) | 20 December 1921 | 13 April 1922 | 114 days | ||
Minister for Railways and State Industrial Enterprises | Sir Thomas Henley | Nationalist | Fuller (2) | 13 April 1922 | 19 June 1922 | 67 days | ||
Richard Ball | 28 June 1922 | 17 June 1925 | 2 years, 354 days | |||||
Minister for Building Materials | Claude Matthews | Labor | McGirr (2) | 19 May 1947 | 9 March 1948 | 295 days | [4] | |
William Dickson | 9 March 1948 | 30 June 1950 | 2 years, 113 days | [5] | ||||
Minister for Secondary Industries Minister for Building Materials |
McGirr (3) Cahill (1) |
30 June 1950 | 15 August 1952 | 2 years, 46 days | ||||
Minister for Industrial Development and Decentralisation | Jack Renshaw | Labor | Heffron (2) Renshaw |
14 March 1962 | 13 May 1965 | 3 years, 60 days | ||
Minister for Decentralisation and Development | John Fuller | Country | Askin (1) (2) (3) (4) (5) | 13 May 1965 | 3 December 1973 | 8 years, 204 days | ||
Tim Bruxner | Askin (6) | 3 December 1973 | 23 January 1976 | 2 years, 51 days | ||||
Milton Morris | Liberal | Lewis (1) (2) Willis | 23 January 1976 | 14 May 1976 | 112 days | |||
Don Day | Labor | Wran (1) | 14 May 1976 | 19 October 1978 | 2 years, 158 days | |||
Minister for Decentralisation | Jack Hallam | Wran (2) | 19 October 1978 | 29 February 1980 | 1 year, 133 days | |||
Minister for Industrial Development Minister for Decentralisation |
Don Day | Wran (3) (4) (5) | 29 February 1980 | 10 February 1984 | 3 years, 347 days | |||
Minister for Industry and Decentralisation | George Paciullo | Wran (6) | 10 February 1984 | 5 April 1984 | 55 days | |||
Eric Bedford | Wran (7) | 5 April 1984 | 31 December 1985 | 1 year, 270 days | ||||
Neville Wran | 1 January 1986 | 6 February 1986 | 36 days | |||||
Minister for Industry and Small Business | Peter Cox | Wran (8) Unsworth |
6 February 1986 | 26 November 1987 | 1 year, 293 days | |||
Minister for Trade and Investment | Andrew Stoner | National | O'Farrell Baird (1) | 4 April 2011 | 17 October 2014 | 3 years, 196 days | ||
Troy Grant | Baird (1) | 17 October 2014 | 2 April 2015 | 167 days | ||||
Minister for Industry, Resources and Energy | Anthony Roberts | Liberal | Baird (2) | 2 April 2015 | 30 January 2017 | 1 year, 303 days | ||
Minister for Trade, Tourism and Major Events | Stuart Ayres | |||||||
Minister for Trade and Industry | Niall Blair | National | Berejiklian (1) | 30 January 2017 | 2 April 2019 | 2 years, 62 days | [6][7] | |
Minister for Regional New South Wales, Industry and Trade | John Barilaro | Berejiklian (2) | 2 April 2019 | 6 October 2021 | 2 years, 187 days | [8] | ||
Minister for Trade and Industry | Stuart Ayres | Liberal | Perrottet (1) | 6 October 2021 | 21 December 2021 | 3 years, 35 days | [9][10] | |
Minister for Enterprise, Investment and Trade | Perrottet (2) | 21 December 2021 | 3 August 2022 | [11] | ||||
Alister Henskens | 5 August 2022 | present | 2 years, 97 days | [12] |
References
- ^ "Administrative Arrangements (Administrative Changes—Ministers and Public Service Agencies) Order (No 3) 2021 [NSW]". NSW Legislation. 6 October 2021. p. 4. Retrieved 7 October 2021.
- ^ a b "Part 6 Ministries since 1856" (PDF). NSW Parliamentary Record. Parliament of New South Wales. Retrieved 2 November 2021.
- ^ "PFO-17 Railways and State Industrial Enterprises". NSW State Records & Archives. Retrieved 2 November 2021. This article incorporates text available under the CC BY 4.0 license.
- ^ "Claude Hilton Matthews (1899–1954)". Former members of the Parliament of New South Wales. Retrieved 7 May 2019.
- ^ "Mr William Edward Dickson (1893-1966)". Former members of the Parliament of New South Wales. Retrieved 30 April 2019.
- ^ Vukovic, Dom; Gerathy, Sarah; McDonald, Philippa (29 January 2017). "NSW Cabinet reshuffle: Premier Gladys Berejiklian announces big changes to front bench". ABC News. Australia. Retrieved 29 January 2017.
- ^ "About the NSW Government". NSW Department of Industry. Retrieved 25 May 2016.
- ^ "Government Notices (30)" (PDF). Government Gazette of the State of New South Wales. 2 April 2019. p. 1088-1090. Retrieved 3 April 2019.
- ^ "Parliament, Ministerial, Courts and Police (507)" (PDF). Government Gazette of the State of New South Wales. 5 October 2021.
- ^ "Parliament, Ministerial, Courts and Police (508)" (PDF). Government Gazette of the State of New South Wales. 6 October 2021.
- ^ "Parliament, Ministerial, Courts and Police (662)" (PDF). Government Gazette of the State of New South Wales. 21 December 2021.
- ^ Department of Premier and Cabinet (3 August 2022). "Changes to NSW ministerial arrangements". NSW Government. Retrieved 14 August 2022.