21 October 2024

UPDATED: Hanson confirms he will run against Lee for Liberal leadership

| Ian Bushnell
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Jeremy Hanson MLA

Former leader and deputy leader Jeremy Hanson says the party should have done better when there was genuine mood for change in the electorate. Photo: Thomas Lucraft.

UPDATED 4:30 pm: Returned Murrumbidgee MLA Jeremy Hanson has confirmed that he will challenge Elizabeth Lee for the leadership of the Canberra Liberals.

A former leader and deputy leader, Mr Hanson would not criticise Ms Lee’s performance but said the party should have done better when there was genuine mood for change in the electorate

“I don’t think that we gave a good enough reason for people to make that change with us,” he said.

Mr Hanson said there were missed opportunities and some policies weren’t tested enough or released soon enough to give candidates time to litigate them.

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Nor were the government’s shortcomings prosecuted effectively.

“We’ve got to make sure that what we’re saying resonates with the community,” he said.

“We’ve also got to point out some of the genuine concerns I think that people feel about this government.”

The decriminalisation of methamphetamines and heroin, and infill development were two such issues.

Asked why the party should look back to him, Mr Hanson said he would bring experience, competence and credibility to the role.

“You’ve got to look like you can be chief minister and run a large budget and a territory and can handle it, and I believe that I’ve demonstrated that,” he said.

Mr Hanson said talk about the party having to become more progressive was a false argument that only served the interest of the Labor Party.

He said it was a non-issue with voters who were concerned about basic issues.

Conservative Liberals such as him, Leanne Castley and Peter Cain topped the vote in their electorates.

“I think we’ve got to move forward as a united party, and I think we’ve got to stop having these endless conversations about whether we’re conservative, whether we’re progressive or whatever,” he said.

“We are a ‘liberal’ party. We are a centre-right party, and we’re focused on centrist issues that matter to the people of Canberra; in particular, families in the suburbs and retirees where, you know, the Liberal vote is very strong.

“We’ve got to be a party that accepts that we are a big tent … and if we don’t do that, then we won’t win in 2028.”

Mr Hanson said that while the Liberals did not take government in 2016 with him as leader, he achieved the greatest number of seats the party had ever won (11) and almost won 12 during a politically difficult time.

He said he was now much more experienced and better politician.

Mr Hanson also made the case that the leader’s bounce would be more valuable outside of Kurrajong where winning three seats was almost impossible.

The best chances for the Liberals achieving that was in Murrumbidgee or Yerrabi, more logical places for the leader to be, he said.

Mr Hanson said he had spoken to a number of colleagues who would support him but could not say if he had the numbers to win in what is a small and closely divided party room.

Mr Hanson lost the deputy leadership last December after a party room spill, in which Leanne Castley emerged as the winner.

Elizabeth Lee conceding defeat on election night 2024

Opposition Leader Elizabeth Lee conceding on Saturday night. Some Liberals believe she was premature in putting up the white flag. Photo: Michelle Kroll.

The fate of any challenge rests in how the party room will shape up after the final seats are decided.

The Liberals could have 10 or nine seats in the new Legislative Assembly, depending on the outcome in Brindabella where there is a three-way tussle for the fifth seat.

On Saturday night, it appeared James Daniels would secure a third seat for the Liberals with a big early swing, but as the count continues, both the Greens’ Laura Nuttall and Labor’s Mick Gentleman have come back into reckoning.

Mr Daniels had the backing of moderate Gary Humphries, so he would likely strengthen Ms Lee’s hand, as would the demise of Hanson supporter Ed Cocks in Murrumbidgee, who is battling it out with Amardeep Singh for a second Liberal seat.

But if Mr Daniels fails to make it, the return of Mr Cocks combined with newcomer Chiaka Barry in Ginninderra could make the difference in such a closely divided party room.

Party figures have come out against lurching back to the right.

On election night, retiring MLA Nicole Lawder said that some in the party were more interested in wielding power than winning elections, pointing the finger at powerful players who have pushed the party too far to the right.

On Sunday, Ms Lee, who dragged the party to the centre in a bid to be more palatable to the electorate, agreed.

“I don’t think she’s wrong,” Ms Lee said.

“Obviously, there is a lot of work to do to make us electable, and certainly, one of the things that I’ve had in terms of feedback has been, ‘Thank you for, you know, making the party more electable’.”

The party so far has suffered a 1 per cent swing against it and could not replicate its 4.5 per cent swing to it in Brindabella elsewhere.

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Frontbencher Mark Parton, who polled highest in that seat, also agreed with Ms Lawder’s assessment and warned against any move back to the right, throwing his full support behind Ms Lee.

“I think it would apply to some party members and I would say to those members who are sitting back saying, ‘Oh, we’ve got to push off hard to the right’, where is it that you guys expect that we would pick up those extra votes because there were a couple of parties and individuals who are much further to the right than the Liberals who ran in the election and they haven’t fared well at all,” he told the ABC.

“So sure, we might gather some votes from Family First or the Belco Party. Where else do you reckon we’re going to get votes from? Do you think if we push to the right that we’re going to get votes from the Greens? Do you think we’re going to get votes from Labor? Like, get a grip here?”

Mr Parton said the centre was the only place from where the Liberals could win an election in the ACT.

A senior party source said Mr Hanson was not the right choice to take the party into the future.

“Jeremy’s about as good with his numbers as he is with party unity,” they said.

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To be fair he was always going to roll Lee win or lose.

The bloke is an absolute clown but at least it’s a bit more honest than pretending there are any moderates in the Canberra Liberals.

Enjoy forever being in opposition folks.

This is the problem in ACT politics. Everyone hangs around with their snout in the trough for the good wage. Hanson had his go and failed but I’m sure is happy in being in opposition and collecting the cheque. There needs to be a rule that they can only serve if elected in a maximum of 3 elections, then become ineligible so new blood can come in. Imagine Gentleman would have disappeared years ago Hargreaves wouldn’t have annoyed us for so long. That woman who hung around for ever in the Liberals would have be gone earlier and we wouldn’t need to be even mentioning Hansen ever again. If he gets the leadership then we can expect another 6 years or Labor/Green rule.

Hanson is the ALP’s secret weapon! There is nothing Centrist about his far right leanings. Here’s hoping that Amardeep Singh get elected.

Jeremy Hanson is closely aligned with the deeply conservative Young Liberals who have never supported Elizabeth Lee as leader. Jeremy, with the support of the YL’s and a few other MLA’s including some recently elected have been undermining her leadership for many years. Mr Hanson has been sharpening his claws in the leadup to the election and gave notice of his intentions on his Facebook page afterwards. It is remarkable those in the party who liked his post, including MLA’s and Nicole Lawder! Is Ms Lawder so stupid after her well-known revelations were revealed to journalists on election night? The destabilisation within the party which has been occurring over many years whilst she was an MLA, with Mr Hanson leading events with his strident efforts to wreck the party?

This will be a good old Liberal party fight where everyone gets down and dirty. All blaming each other for the election loss and getting stuck into each other! Who could forget the bust up when Bill Stefaniak lost the leadership with everyone in the party yelling at each other in the Assembly courtyard with shocked media looking on and filming events! This was when squeaky clean Zed Seselja emerged from the ruckus to become party leader and we all know the rest!

Just business as usual!

Ms Lee tried to ape Labour by taking the party to the left …. not centre. Mr Hanson is centre right. Aping Labour doesn’t work. I look forward to Mr Hanson taking the party back to traditional Liberal values and sound fiscal manageent..

According to Wikipedia Hanson is the current Leader of the Opposition, so it was all his fault anyway.

Is it your argument, bob9000, that given the votes stripped from Labor went to centre-left independents rather than the Liberals. that moving the Liberals further right will be just the ticket to win those voters?

Do you instead believe that the Liberal right is divinely correct and all shall see the light? Failure to listen and adapt is exactly their problem. I would love to see a viable Liberal opposition, one that did not reject the electorate then blame the electorate for it.

Yep that’s right Bob the Canberra Liberals lost because they weren’t far right-wing enough and putting a far-right wing edgelord in charge will definitely not isolate the Canberra Liberals further from the majority of the electorate….lol sure, why not…lol

Perhaps it’s time for Parton to put down the microphone and join Leanne Castley as a considered leadership team. They have the personal and professional attributes to lead Canberra Liberals to government.

Can people like Megsy explain what “progressive” is and why it is so good. Barr said it many times in his victory speech to point of nauseating. Under progressive Barr Labor Canberra’s hospital and education system has gone from one of the best in the country to the worst, we have lost our AAA rating, CIT and HRIMS stuff up, increased cost of living, rising rates and fuel, reduction of green space and increase of heat creating concrete high risers, stolen a private hospital when they promised to build one of their own, not shown costings of the tram.

Looks like it is the Labor voters that are delusional and have a tin ear. What is interesting is that the left think anyone that doesn’t agree with their hard left views are hard right. As for personal attacks Labor ran an advertisement against Leanne Castley that was shown to be a lie and was only pulled down just before the election. Blaming Liberals for Labor’s corruption, lies and incompetence is the hallmark of progressives.

There is no point in the Canberra Liberals being Labor Lite. You have to have the guts to stand up for centre-right values. That is what the thousands of Canberrans who voted for the Canberra Liberals would expect. Of course, the left-wing Canberra media would want the Canberra Liberals to go to the left, but a big percentage of the people who voted for the Canberra Liberals do not!

Entirely made up. As if anybody is going to tell Bushnell of all people about goings on within the ACT Libs.

Hanson was suspiciously quiet during the campaign and many of us feared he was waiting for yet another opportunity to grab the leadership. Lee was handicapped by having him on her “team”. To blame her for the loss without looking at the behind-the-scenes internal politics shows the party is just as delusional as ever.

It’s interesting that the people who didn’t vote Labor, because they wanted a change, turned to the Independents (who were mainly progressive-leaning) rather than going to the Libs. Hanson is kidding himself if he thinks the electorate is waiting for the hard right to take over again.

I hope the party also has a look at whoever chose the “Not Happy Andrew” cringeworthy ads. The Canberra electorate has made it clear, multiple times, that it doesn’t like such negative personal attacks. There are tin ears in the Liberal marketing team.

Hanson quiet! You clearly are not in the same electorate. Mr Hanson is THE most visible Liberal, often at local shops, sends a regular informative email newsletter and is very accessible online.

John Alexander Berry4:05 pm 21 Oct 24

I always considered Jeremy as a decent sort of chap!

And makes the Libs unelectable!

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