James Purcell | |
Honorific-Suffix: | MLC |
Birth Date: | 1953 1, df=yes |
Birth Place: | Bessiebelle, Victoria, Australia |
Office: | Member of the Victorian Legislative Council for Western Victoria Region |
Term Start: | 29 November 2014 |
Term End: | 24 November 2018 |
Successor: | Andy Meddick |
Party: | Vote 1 Local Jobs |
Occupation: | Accountant |
Education: | Deakin University |
James Desmond Purcell (born 7 January 1953) is an Australian politician. He was a Vote 1 Local Jobs member of the Victorian Legislative Council, having represented Western Victoria Region from 2014 to 2018.[1] [2]
Purcell was born and raised in Bessiebelle, in Victoria's Western District, by his parents Bernie and Bonnie Purcell. He grew up on the family farm with his five siblings. Purcell attended Heywood High School and earned his accounting qualification from Deakin University's Warrnambool campus whereupon he was admitted to the Charter of Professional Accountants.[3]
James Purcell has worked in senior financial positions with many large corporations, including Amcor and GlaxoSmithKline (10 years in Port Fairy, Melbourne and London). He owns a Port Fairy-based accounting firm and self-storage business.[4]
Purcell began his political career in local government where he was twice elected to the Moyne Shire Council, in 2008 and 2012. Purcell served as Mayor in 2010 and 2014, stepping down when he was elected to the State Parliament.
At the 2010 Victorian state election, Purcell stood as an independent candidate in the District of South-West Coast, where he gained 11.53% of the primary vote but lost to the incumbent Liberal Party candidate, Denis Napthine.[5]
In November 2014, Purcell founded the Vote 1 Local Jobs Party to represent the Western Victoria Region in the Victorian Legislative Council. The party was registered in November 2014 and later that month contested the 2014 Victorian election with Purcell as party leader.
Purcell stood again in the 2014 Victorian state election for the Legislative Council and was elected as the sole representative of the Vote 1 Local Jobs Party for the Western Victoria Region.[6] At the 2018 state election he again stood in the Legislative Assembly seat of South-West Coast as an independent, but was defeated.