Bill Tilley
William John Tilley is the Liberal Party member for the seat of Benambra in the Victorian Legislative Assembly. He was first won the seat at the 2006 Victorian state election, beating Labor candidate and Wodonga mayor, Lisa Mahood, and former Nationals upper house member Bill Baxter.
Prior to his candidacy, Tilley served in the Australian Army and then the Victoria Police.
Parliamentary career
Following the election of the Liberal Baillieu government at the 2010 Victorian state election, Tilley was appointed Parliamentary Secretary for Police. On 26 October 2011, the Office of Police Integrity released a report into the resignation of Assistant Police Commissioner Sir Ken Jones, stating that Tilley had met Sir Ken and Tristan Weston, a police officer on leave, while acting as an advisor to the Police Minister Peter Ryan, to complain about the then Police Commissioner Simon Overland. As a result of that report, Tilley resigned as Parliamentary Secretary for Police.Events surrounding the subsequent Lawyer X scandal suggested that Tilley might have been unjustly tainted by the allegations made when he was Parliamentary Secretary. The revelations in March 2019 included that a former barrister for gangland figures, Nicola Gobbo, and threatened the foundations of the state's criminal justice system and some of Victoria Police's most celebrated convictions. The scandal, unfolding largely in secret and shrouded by suppression orders, took almost a decade to play out, until the Director of Public Prosecutions decided Gobbo's former clients had a right to know that she might have informed on them, breaching her duties as their lawyer.
In March 2024, Tilley announced that he would not re-contest Benambra at the 2026 Victorian state election, and would retire from politics after serving as the member for 20 years.
Despite being in his last term, Tilley continued to advocate for a better deal for Albury Wodonga Health, the only cross-border health services in Australia. The Victorian and NSW Governments committed $558M to build a medical tower at the Albury Base Hospital site in October 2022. Tilley called the announcement a case of putting "lipstick on a pig", but other politicians and candidates at the state election that year lauded it as a "great outcome for the community". Documents obtained by the NSW Parliament show the decision was skewed by self-interest rather than meeting the needs identified by a thorough review of the hospital's needs for the next 30 years. Many of the promises included in the announcement have been cut from the project to meet the budgeted cost.