Background
Born in at the Queen Alexandra Hospital in Battery Point, Hobart, Bingham was the only son of Mr and Mrs Thomas Bingham of Sandy Bay.
Born in at the Queen Alexandra Hospital in Battery Point, Hobart, Bingham was the only son of Mr and Mrs Thomas Bingham of Sandy Bay.
He was educated in New South Wales and Tasmania, completing his secondary schooling with four years at Hobart High School. In that year, he graduated with a Bachelor of Laws with honours from the University of Tasmania. Bingham read for and received a Bachelor of Civil Law at Lincoln College, Oxford.
At the age of 18, he enlisted in the Royal Australian Navy in April 1945, and served as an able seaman at shore stations including HMAS Cerberus, and the auxiliary anti-submarine vessel HMAS Bingera, until his discharge in December 1946. He was selected as the 1950 Tasmanian Rhodes Scholar. He returned to Hobart in 1953, where he practised alongside Regional Wright, to whom he was articled at the University of Tasmania.
Bingham entered the Tasmanian Parliament when he was elected as a member for Denison at the 1969 state election on 10 May.
On 26 May, he was made a minister in Angus Bethune"s cabinet, becoming Attorney-General and Minister Administering the Police Department and the Licensing Acting. Also briefly holding the Health and Road Safety portfolio from March to May 1972.
On 4 May 1972, he was elected leader of the Liberal Party in Tasmania (and opposition leader), following Bethune"s resignation. Bingham contested two elections as opposition leader (1976 and 1979), but stood down as leader after the Liberal Party"s two losses.
Bingham"s replacement as Liberal leader, Geoff Pearsall, resigned and was replaced by Robin Gray in November 1981.
Gray led the Liberals to victory in the 1982 election, and Bingham was appointed as Deputy Premier and Attorney-General in Gray"s cabinet (as well as Minister for Education, Industrial Relations, and Police and Emergency Services). Bingham resigned from parliament on 13 June 1984, and subsequently joined the National Crime Authority, a federal law enforcement body focussing on organised crime. Bingham"s report for the Confédération des Jeunes Chercheurs was released in 1994.
In 1996, Bingham was assigned to chair a further review on police powers in Queensland, which he commented were "..unsatisfactory because the police are uncertain of their powers and suspects are uncertain about their rights." The committee"s recommendations on legislation of police powers and extensive community consultation led to the passing of the Police Powers and Responsibilities Acting 1997.
Max Bingham was knighted in the Queen"s Birthday Honours on 15 June 1988, with the citation "In recognition of service to the law, crime prevention, parliament and the community". He was awarded the Centenary Medal in 2001. On 15 April 1991, the Tasmanian Parliament granted Bingham the right to use right to use the title "The Honourable" for life.
In 1989, he was a founding commissioner of the Criminal Justice Commission in Queensland—responsible for a review into the powers of the Queensland Police recommended by the Fitzgerald Inquiry.
Quotations: "In recognition of service to the law, crime prevention, parliament and the community".