Early involvement Walsh became interested in politics as a teenager, as an admirer of ALP prime minister
Ben Chifley. He joined the ALP in 1961 and helped revive the inactive Kellerberrin branch, serving as secretary from 1966 to 1974. He was the principal author of a new agricultural policy for the state party, which was adopted in 1970. He was noted for his pro-
free market views, and was identified with the
economic rationalism strain within the ALP. In his 1995
memoirs,
Confessions of a Failed Finance Minister, Walsh was critical of his colleagues and of political processes in general for failing to curb what he saw as wasteful government expenditure, and unnecessary government intervention. Also, in his book he corrected errors made in
Whatever It Takes, the book written by former ministerial colleague and fellow Senator
Graham Richardson. ==Later life==