state elections – Michmutters
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Australia

With a state election looming, a crisis has left Victoria’s opposition with no choice but to regroup

Just months out of a state election, Victoria’s alternative government has been thrown into disarray by a leaked email, a “disastrous” interview and a slow-moving fallout.

Details of a proposed arrangement between a wealthy Liberal Party donor and the Opposition Leader’s chief of staff came to light at the beginning of last week.

Matthew Guy fronted the media within hours and announced his chief of staff had resigned, and seemed determined to put the issue to bed.

However, in the days since, the series of events stemming from that initial revelation have only gathered momentum.

A Liberal MP, who did not want to be named, recently told the ABC that Mr Guy’s position as leader was precarious and another scandal would be fatal, but said that, in the absence of an alternative, he may hang on until the election.

At the start of May, when Mr Guy pledged extra funding for Victoria’s watchdogs, the Independent Broad-based Anti-corruption Commission (IBAC) and the Victorian Ombudsman, he said his party was “focused on rebuilding our system of integrity and honesty in government “.

The government’s integrity came under fire last month, with the release of the results of an IBAC investigation detailing “extensive misconduct” by Labor MPs, as well as an ombudsman’s report rehashing the “red shirts” scandal.

The Opposition Leader has been eager to turn voters’ minds to integrity and trust in government, but struggled to formulate a response as his own office was subject to scrutiny.

So, how did the opposition get to this point just over three months out from a state election?

The proposed arrangement

On August 2The Age published revelations about Mr Guy’s chief of staff, Mitch Catlin, approaching billionaire party donor Jonathan Munz for payments totaling more than $100,000 to his private marketing business, Catchy Media.

a man in a suit smiles at the camera.
Mitch Catlin resigned as Matthew Guy’s chief of staff.(Supplied: LinkedIn)

Mr Catlin said no contract was signed, and Mr Guy fronted the media and asserted more than once that the arrangement, brought to light by a leaked email, had only ever been a proposal.

“We’re acting on a perception — this wasn’t even put in place,” he said.

That day, the Andrews government announced it would refer the matter to the state’s integrity agencies, IBAC and the ombudsman, Victoria Police, the Australian Federal Police and the Victorian Electoral Commission (VEC).

It also published a list of 14 questions directed at Mr Guy about Mr Catlin’s proposed arrangement.

The interview

Almost a week after the initial reports, Mr Guy appointed his childhood friend, Nick McGowan, as his new chief of staff on August 8.

Mr McGowan has also been preselected as a Liberal candidate for an upper house seat in the Eastern Metropolitan Region, but Mr Guy stated his new chief of staff wouldn’t be campaigning for the seat during working hours.

The Opposition Leader and Mr McGowan have a close personal and professional relationship, with Mr McGowan best man at Mr Guy’s wedding, and his chief of staff while he was planning minister in the Baillieu-Napthine government.

Mr McGowan will also be forced to take leave by November 10 when the VEC deadline for candidate nominations closes, meaning Mr Guy will also need to find a replacement for his top aid for the final two weeks before the election.

Nick McGowan, in a blue hoodie reading 'Nick McGowan Eltham' next to a smiling Matthew Guy in a suit, both reaching out hands.
Nick McGowan, Matthew Guy’s new chief of staff, is also an upper house candidate for the state election.(AAP: James Ross)

The appointment caused some frustration inside the party, with one Liberal MP, who did not want to be named, labeling the move a “shocker” and “a job for a mate”.

They said it sent a “poor message” to the party’s other candidates that they did not need to bother campaigning until they lodged their nomination.

On that same day, Mr Guy was criticized for his performance during a 12-minute radio interview on 3AW where he repeatedly refused to answer questions about when he first found out that Mr Catlin had approached Mr Munz about the proposed arrangement.

Rather than starting a fresh week on the front foot, Monday’s events put Mr Guy right back to square one, and the interview drew harsh responses from listeners.

One man who identified himself as a “rusted-on Liberal voter” said Mr Guy had “lost the election” by being evasive.

Another caller described the interview as “disastrous.”

The departures

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Categories
Australia

Labor selects former journalist Katelin McInerney to challenge Gareth Ward in Kiama at 2023 NSW election

The New South Wales Labor party has announced its first candidate ahead of the 2023 election to take on the embattled high-profile Kiama MP Gareth Ward.

Former journalist, unionist and life-long Kiama resident Katelin McInerney is hoping to unseat Mr Ward, who was suspended from parliament after he was accused of historic indecent and sexual assault offences.

The former government minister, who denies the charges has refused to resign in the wake of his suspension and recently defended his right to stay on as MP.

His matter returns to court later this month.

On Saturday, Ms McInerney said she would not ignore Mr Ward’s absence from Macquarie Street during her eight-month campaign.

“As a resident here, I can’t ignore the fact that we do not have a voice on the floor of parliament,” she said.

“We have an MP who is not allowed to take our concerns and to represent our interests in the room where it happens.

“We deserve a real voice in parliament and a local member who is able to not just be a member of parliament but a member in the parliament of NSW,” Ms McInerney said.

A young couple with a child
Katelin McInerney says she and partner Brian want a better future for their two-year-old son William. (Supplied: Katelin McInerney)

‘A tough seat to win’

She said she was “deeply concerned” about her two-year-old son William’s future and it was a driving influence behind her decision to stand.

“Because of that I will work tirelessly to move the needle on the things that matter most to the people that work here.

“Fixing our hospitals, fixing our schools, reducing the congestion on our roads, ensuring that development in this beautiful region is not only sustainable but that it reflects our community,” Ms McInerney said.

Labor leader Chris Minns said Mr Ward’s strong hold over the seat was the reason the party had named his candidate eight months out from the election.

“That’s recognition of the fact that it will be a tough seat to win,” he said.

“Katelin knows that, we all know that. We will fight for every vote.”

Mr Ward won the seat from Labor’s Matt Brown in 2011, who controversially resigned from his role as Police Minister after allegedly hosting a wild post-budget election party in his parliamentary office.

Members expelled, resign

Just days before Ms McInerney’s selection was announced, the New South Wales Branch of the Labor Party announced it had expelled Mr Brown from the party.

A spokesperson said he was due to his decision to run against an endorsed party candidate at the Kiama local government elections in December.

Mr Brown declined to comment.

A man sits near a playground in his yellow campaign hat and t-shirt with posters.
Kiama Councilor Matt Brown. (ABC Illawarra: Ainslie Drewitt Smith)

His expulsion came a fortnight after party stalwart, former Shellharbour Mayor Marianne Saliba had her 35-year membership revoked, on the same grounds.

In the days prior to her expulsion, she was accused of reversing over the foot of a rival candidate, and stepson of sitting Shellharbour MP Anna Watson.

Several local branch members who supported Ms Saliba’s tilt at the recent fresh election in Shellharbour Ward A, have since resigned from the party concerned over her treatment.

sticking to the rules

Mr Minns has played down the exits and infighting plaguing the local branches and said it was not akin to the “scandals” impacting the Perrottet government.

“We’ve got long established principles in relation to the suspension and disciplinary matters in relation to people who run against endorsed candidates.

“It’s been that way inside the Labor party for 130 years. Nothing has changed about our internal rules of management of candidate selection.”

Voters in NSW will go to the polls on March 25, 2023.

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