George was Vice President of the
Australian Council of Trade Unions (ACTU) in 1987, Assistant Secretary of the ACTU 1991–96 and President of the ACTU 1996–March 2000. She was the first woman to hold this position. She was Assistant National Director, Trade Union Training Authority 1989–91 and a board member of Delta Electricity from 2000 to 2001. In November 1994 she was endorsed as the Left faction's candidate for a
Victorian Senate seat. When Victorian Senator
Olive Zakharov, also a member of the Left, was killed in a road accident in March 1995, it was assumed that George would be nominated to fill the casual vacancy. However, factional negotiations resulted in the seat going to a member of the Right faction,
Jacinta Collins. George then withdrew her candidacy and did not reconsider a political career until returning to Sydney after leaving the ACTU. She sought support for a seat in either of the houses of the NSW Parliament, but this came to nothing. She was then offered a chance to stand for the federal seat of
Throsby in New South Wales in 2001. She was inducted onto the
Victorian Honour Roll of Women in 2001. George served on the House of Representatives Standing Committee on Environment and Heritage from 20 March 2002, on the Standing Committee on Family and Community Services from 20 March 2002 to 31 August 2004 and on the Standing Committee on Family and Human Services from 2 December 2004. She was Shadow Parliamentary Secretary for Environment and Heritage from 2004 to 2007. She retired from Parliament at the
2010 federal election. Unlike other ACTU Presidents (including most notably former Prime Minister Bob Hawke) who went on to be elected to Federal Parliament, George did not hold a ministerial position during her federal parliamentary career. She was made an Officer (AO) in the General Division of the
Order of Australia on 10 June 2013. ==References==