Background
Farley was born in Townsville, Queensland, on 9 December 1952.
Farley was born in Townsville, Queensland, on 9 December 1952.
Farley began his career as a journalist for the Rockhampton Morning Bulletin, and as an advisor to the Federal Minister for Health in the Whitlam Government. He eventually became the executive director of the Cattlemen"s Union of Australia and the chief executive of the National Farmers" Federation, a position he held for eight years. In 1989, while the head of the National Farmer"s Federation, collaborating with Philip Toyne from the Australian Conservation Foundation, Farley succeeded in acquiring a financial contribution from the Australian Government towards the national Landcare volunteer movement.
Following the investment, Farley committed his life and his career to the needs of farmers, conservationists and to the process of reconciliation towards the Indigenous population.
That same year, Farley ran for the Australian Senate as a candidate for the centrist Australian Democrats. He represented the Australian Capital Territory on the platform of improving a future for all Australians by first establishing co-operation between Settler Australians and Indigenous Australians and by the conservation of the native ecology through the Landcare movement.
On 13 May 2006, at the age of 53, Farley died after his wheelchair overturned outside Balmain Hospital in Sydney. He had been leaving after undergoing rehabilitation treatment for a brain aneurysm which he had suffered five months earlier.
His funeral was held at Street Brigid"s Church, in Marrickville.
The service was attended not only by numerous prominent politicians and celebrities, but also by indigenous Australians and rural cattlemen and farmers whom he had represented during his career. Farley was actively involved in Australian politics, with the most notable being his contribution towards the creation of the Landcare movement, an environmental organisation with thousands of volunteers across Australia.
He emerged in the public"s eye as a prominent member of the Council for Aboriginal Reconciliation, an organisation that looked to establish healthy, multicultural relationships between Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islanders and non-Indigenous Australians.