24 January 2025

Liberal Senate candidate's position is becoming untenable

| Ian Bushnell
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Jacob Vadakkedathu

Jacob Vadakkedathu campaigning at Charnwood last week. Photo: Jacob Vadakkedathu.

Oh dear. The Canberra Liberals just can’t take a trick.

Only weeks out from a federal election being called – it could be held as early as mid-April but more likely May – they have to decide whether to dump their lead Senate candidate Jacob Vadakkedathu.

The word was out late last year that some members were not happy with Mr Vadakkedathu’s performance and that he had not delivered on his fundraising promises.

His lack of visibility while incumbent ACT Senators David Pocock and Katy Gallagher dominated the local and national headlines left everybody thinking that the only contest would be who of the two would top the vote.

For the first time, an ACT Liberal Senate candidate is not even on the radar.

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Simmering behind all this are allegations of branch stacking, the basis for Mr Vadakkedathu being called in to front three party chiefs earlier this month, who urged him to step aside.

But he wasn’t for shifting. So this Saturday, a divisional council meeting will be held to decide whether to recommend that the Management Committee disendorse him.

Cue strategic leaking of emails and allegations about a cricket bat auctioned off without permission and Mr Vadakkedathu paying for people’s party memberships.

Defamatory says Mr Vadakkedathu, who says a campaign to dislodge him is being waged.

You reckon?

How did it come to this?

Why did a three-time losing Legislative Assembly candidate get the nod in the first place when, if the party was serious about winning back the Senate seat, a high-profile candidate with broad appeal and the energy to take on Senators Pocock and Gallagher was needed?

Especially when the Labor Government is struggling amid a cost-of-living crisis and a less-than-thrilling performance from its Prime Minister.

Was Mr Vadakkedathu just a placeholder anyway?

As it is, the two ACT Senators have gone unchallenged, with Pocock consolidating his position to the extent that Gallagher is considered an underdog.

This is an insult to Liberal and undecided voters who should have a real choice, remembering that the party still garnered a third of the vote in last year’s ACT election.

The party now faces a dilemma. Does it persevere for the sake of party peace with a candidate who seems to have next to no chance or dump Mr Vadakkedathu and find someone, if it can, who can at least offer some sort of contest?

The odds are moving towards the latter but just who that might be is anyone’s guess.

Mr Vadakkedathu would best sniff the breeze and go quietly because, with so many in the party appearing to have lost faith in him, the campaign would be a whimper if he held on.

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Senator Pocock has grown in strength and Senator Gallagher, no matter what the polls say about Albo, remains hugely popular in the ACT. And she is a high-level cabinet minister.

They need a full-throttled campaign with the full backing of the party, not a few corflutes and shopping centre appearances.

It has also been revealed that the understandable cancellation of an event this week where Mr Vadakkedathu was to be endorsed by Federal Opposition Leader Peter Dutton has depleted an already meagre campaign budget.

Of course, it is probably way too late. But run dead this time around and 2028 will be even harder, no matter who the candidate is.

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Here’s a question Ian. Do you write anything other than anti-Liberal oarty stories? If you look at ALL your previous articles going back weeks they have a single theme and this is your bias against the Liberal Party.

Again with this?

Mate, it’s a current story of legitimate interest to the public.

The fact that you don’t want any coverage of the Liberal Party’s dysfunction because you blindly support one side like it’s a football team doesn’t make it go away, Rob.

I’m begging you to grow up mate.

I was at an Indian wedding in Canberra. One of the Indian guests bemoaned the fact that the Indian community in Canberra, despite it’s size, had no Indian member in the ACT Assembly or Federal Parliament. She gave two reasons for this. She mentioned that most Indians in Canberra support the Liberal Party in a Lobor town The second reason she gave was that the Indian community in Canberra is split along religious, caste and regional lines.

So Ian yet one more biased anti-LNP story. What next mate? Everything from hinting at corruption, division and inept. The last I will definitely agree with you on. But I suppose there is a Federal election just around the corner. Jokes on you Ian because no matter how many in ACT vote ALP or Communist Green the ALP are done and dusted everywhere else.

Lucy “Lucy Lastic” Lastic7:31 am 28 Jan 25

How is it biased Rob? Please explain where the story presented was incorrect. I’ll wait.

The Greens aren’t communists and more than the Liberals are fascists. You need to log off Telegram and read a book, Rob.

Why would a quality candidate put themselves up for what is clearly an unwinnable seat?

The Liberals have only missed an ACT senate spot once AFAIK. Are they such losers they’re giving up on the ACT for good?

What I find vastly amusing about all of this is that while the current Canberra Liberals are deservedly unelectable a small L, socially moderate, environmentally sensible conservative party would probably do well here.

But instead of reforming and seeking to represent the electorate as it is, its dysfunction, whinging and/or cheap political cons like Coe’s Bo-Jo impersonation or hiding the ratbags behind Lee.

Lucy “Lucy Lastic” Lastic7:30 am 28 Jan 25

Finding quality amongst those willing to run has always been a problem.

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