Ivan Trayling

The Honourable
Ivan Trayling
Member of the Victorian Legislative Council
In office
1972–1982
Monarch Elizabeth II
Preceded by Jack O'Connell
Succeeded by Barry Pullen
Constituency Melbourne Province
Personal details
Born Ivan Barry Trayling
Hobart, Tasmania, Australia
Political party Australian Labor Party
Spouse(s) Thelma Gwenneth Oberin (m. 1957)
Bernadette Trayling (m. 1977)

Ivan Barry Trayling is a former Australian politician.

Early life and family

Ivan Trayling was born in 1936 in Hobart, Tasmania, the son of Ronald George Trayling, Chief Clerk of the State Superannuation Board of the State of Tasmania & the state Labor Party auditor, and Gwendoline Florence Iles.[1]

Ivan Trayling winning the 440 yards race

He went to A.G. Ogilve High School in Hobart, Tasmania and was a star athlete. Trayling broke a school record on 25 March 1952 which had stood for 14 years when he won the boys' 880 yards championship at the A. G. Ogilvie High School athletic sports, clipping 2 seconds off the previous record set in 1938.[2] He followed that up the next day with winning the open 100 (in a record 10.1 seconds), 220 and 440 yards, giving him that year's open title.[3] He was in the Australian Army Cadets for 5 years.

In his first marriage, to Thelma Gwenneth Oberin, a descendant of immigrants from Germany, Scotland, Ireland, and England, he had two children, Sue and Richard. In 1977, after his divorce, he married Bernadette Simmons (daughter of CDR JB Simmons and Dr Charlotte Simmons), who was descended from a noble Portuguese family traced back to Braz Fernandes (1791–1865), Knight Commander of the Order of Christ and the first ever Vice Consul of Portugal in Bombay.[4] They had one son, Mark.

He is a graduate of the Australian Department of Defence Industrial Mobilisation Course.

Political career

Local government - St Kilda

Trayling joined the St. Kilda West Branch of the Labor Party in 1964 and campaigned for the need for a library, a child minding centre, as well as a range of other issues. A 31-year-old Marketing Manager at the time, he became a Councillor for St Kilda in 1967 after defeating the sitting West Ward Councillor, Bill Bush, who had not been opposed before. His campaign was managed by Brian Zouch, a fellow Labor Party member and news editor for the Southern Cross, who made sure that all householders who had agreed to vote for Trayling did so by ticking their names off on the roll on polling day, then sending cars to fetch those who had not appeared so that they could vote as they had promised before voting closed. As promised, when Trayling won he headed up a Library Sub-Committee as Chairman in 1969, with the Foundation stone being laid by him in 1972 in his then capacity as Mayor of the City of St Kilda.[5]

During his time in local government Trayling was also involved in the movement for abortion rights. Bill Dye headed the Abortion Law Reform Association, of which Trayling was a committee member.[6] The Abortion Law Reform Association was formed in 1968 to press for law reform, with the more specific aim of securing legislation along the lines of Britain's Abortion Act.

State government - Victoria

In 1972 Trayling became the Australian Labor Party member for the Legislative Council seat of Melbourne Province, which he held until 1982.

He was at the time the youngest member of the Australian Labor Party in the Legislative Council.[7]

In his inaugural speech to Parliament he highlighted three main points: his concern with the growing differing laws and regulations amongst states such as with roads, censorship, health and workers compensation; certain competition between states were hurting the national interest; and revision of the structure of local government, which he believed had become over-governed and needed downsizing.[8]

From 1973 to 1979 he was Shadow Minister for Local Government. From 1973 to 1976 he was Deputy Chairman of the Osteopathy, Chiropractic and Naturopath committee, looking into the standard of care, extent & necessity of treatments etc. From 1976 to 1982 he was on the Conservation of Energy Resources and House committees.

Meetings with heads of state

In January 1972, Trayling met with Sweden's Prime Minister Olof Palme in Stockholm to discuss their mutual interest and support of the anti-Vietnam movement and the socialist policies of the day.

On 3 September 1975, Trayling had a private meeting with India's Prime Minister Indira Gandhi in New Delhi, during India's "Emergency" period [9] and discussed India's political situation, demography, trade and so forth.[10]

In 1978 after Sydney's Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting, India's Prime Minister Morarji Desai visited Melbourne to meet with Sir Robert Menzies, an old friend and Trayling, on the recommendation of Vadilal Dagli. Dagli was the editor of Commerce magazine in India and interested in an article on the views of India's future.

Trayling retired from politics in 1982.

Honours

Titles and styles

Life after politics

After his political career he became Marketing Manager for Plessey Australia (1982–84), Managing Director for Ericsson Defence Systems (1985–93) and Managing Director of Bernmark Pty Ltd (1994 to retiring in 2004).

From 2003 he took an interest in horse racing in India. His wife Bernadette enjoyed successes with her horses, including:

AQUILO Won the Nanoli Stud Pune Derby, 2005 and came 5th in the Indian Derby.

PICASSO Won the Prive Equine Excellence Award for Leading Juvenile 2010-11, Won the Poonawalla Breeders Multimillion (gr.1) 2010 and came second in the 2011 Two Thousand Guineas.

He also started getting involved with horses in Australia and New Zealand from 2012 onwards.

References

  1. Re-member Parliament of Victoria
  2. Schoolboy Breaks Old Record, The Mercury newspaper 26 March 1952
  3. Schoolboy Athlete Takes Three Sprint Titles, The Mercury newspaper 27 March 1952
  4. Noted Historian Dead Mr Braz A. Fernandes, Obituary, Times of India, 9 June 1951
  5. St Kilda The Show Goes On, The History of St Kilda Volume III, By Anne Longmire, 1989, p. 227
  6. The Racket: How Abortion Became Legal In Australia, By Gideon Haigh, 2008, page 113 - digital copy available in Google Books
  7. Holding Set To Reshuffle Team, The Age newspaper, 1 October 1974
  8. Inaugural Speech Parliament of Victoria
  9. The Changing Image of India By Santwana Kumar Das, page 113 - digital copy available in Google Books
  10. Transcript of an interview between Ivan Trayling and Indira Gandhi, As communicated by the Prime Minister's Secretariat H.Y. Prasad, 4 September 1975
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