logo
Conservative son of a ‘leftist firebrand' takes on a former dolphin trainer in Labor's most marginal WA seat

Conservative son of a ‘leftist firebrand' takes on a former dolphin trainer in Labor's most marginal WA seat

The Guardian29-04-2025

The Liberal candidate Howard Ong will challenge a former dolphin trainer, Sam Lim, in Saturday's election for the knife-edge Western Australian seat of Tangney, on the same day his little brother – Singapore's health minister – goes to the polls.
Ong, an IT consultant born in Singapore, will face off against the Labor incumbent, Malaysian-born Lim, while his brother, One Ye Kung, stands for the governing conservative party, the People's Action party.
Their father, Ong Lian Teng, was a member of Singapore's parliament in the 1960s. He has been described as a 'leftist firebrand' who was once arrested for his opposition to the party his son may one day lead.
Labor is battening down the hatches in Western Australia after its convincing sweep there in 2022, when it picked up four Liberal seats, and a surprisingly emphatic win at last month's state election.
Lim – who is also a former police officer and monk – holds Tangney with a post-redistribution margin of 2.8%.
The relatively wealthy riverside electorate enjoys higher than average incomes, education levels and home ownership.
Sign up for the Afternoon Update: Election 2025 email newsletter
Just over 16% of those living there claim Chinese ancestry, which is more than three times the national average.
The Liberal party initially preselected a former Australian Survivor contestant and SAS soldier Mark Wales, despite concerns about a novel he has written depicting a civil war in Australia after a Chinese invasion.
Wales stepped down after a family member suffered a serious medical episode.
John Phillimore, the executive director of Curtin University's John Curtin Institute of Public Policy, says before 2022 Tangney was a 'classic, obvious Liberal seat', without the shifts that favoured teal independents.
'It was the real out-of-the-box result last time,' he says. 'You'd imagine the Liberals would have it high on its list of seats to win back.'
As in the rest of the nation, the cost of living is a big issue in WA. But the state is reaping the benefits of another mining boom, with low unemployment and high wages. The fight over ending live exports is a mainly rural issue, although farmers are trying to make it a statewide one.
In the lead-up to Saturday's election, Lim tells Guardian Australia he had 'goose bumps' when he was elected, and Parliament House was an 'alien world'.
'It was a humbling moment,' he says. 'I also can feel on my shoulders a big responsibility because I represent the people of Tangney … so every time I walk in there I remember that.'
Lim sounds wide-eyed and enthusiastic but he doesn't forget his political lines.
'I'm very proud that we've helped them in many ways … cheaper medicines, cheaper childcare, tax cuts for everyone … people talk to me about cost of living and as a result I ask them to vote for me,' he says.
Ong declined to speak to Guardian Australia. According to his official bio, he was 'raised by hardworking parents' in Singapore, where he did his national service before moving to WA to study at Curtin.
He glosses over his father's history, saying merely that he was 'a politician for a number of years'.
Phillimore says big names from both sides had been regularly visiting Labor's most marginal WA seat, 'doing their bit to get their guys across the line'.
The foreign affairs minister, Penny Wong, has described Lim as 'one of the hardest working MPs' she has ever met while the opposition leader, Peter Dutton, has praised Ong's 'wonderful work'.
But as Labor continues its creep forward in the national polls, YouGov has switched its projections for Tangney from a Liberal to a Labor win.
'At the beginning of the year if you asked most people they'd say Tangney and Bullwinkel would go to the Liberals,' Phillimore says.
'The results of the state election make that less the case … Labor won pretty comfortably in all the seats along the river there.'
He refers to the 'sophomore effect', under which someone in their second term can expect a swing towards them.
'I think they'd be feeling confident,' he says.
Tangney was named for Labor's first female senator, Dorothy Tangney, whose maiden, wartime speech in 1944 paid tribute to working women, the importance of freedom and democracy, and the need for social security, education, adequate pensions, a national health system, decent housing, and care for veterans.
The Labor stalwart John Dawkins won the newly created seat in 1974 but swiftly lost it after Gough Whitlam's dismissal and the 1975 election. He returned to parliament in the seat of Fremantle.
Wales is not the only Tangney Liberal to pen a novel.
Dennis Jensen, who held Tangney until 2016, famously wrote a racy novel that served up graphic sex and a fictional war between Australia and an Indonesia-China coalition.
He lost a preselection vote to Ben Morton, a close ally of the former prime minister Scott Morrison. Morton in turn lost the seat to Lim.
The other Tangney contenders are Eric Hayward for the Greens, the chilli enthusiast Phillip Leslie from the Legalise Cannabis party, Steve Kefalinos for Pauline Hanson's One Nation and James Rai for the Australian Christians.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

May jobs report shows 139,000 jobs were added last month
May jobs report shows 139,000 jobs were added last month

The Herald Scotland

timean hour ago

  • The Herald Scotland

May jobs report shows 139,000 jobs were added last month

Before the report's release, economists surveyed by Bloomberg estimated that 125,000 jobs were added last month. Job gains for March and April were revised down by a combined 95,000, portraying a weaker labor market that believed in late winter and early spring. March's total was downgraded from 185,000 to 120,000 and April's, from 177,000 to 147,000. Is the job market good or bad right now? The labor market has held up remarkably well despite the hurdles posed by Trump's economic policies, with employment gains averaging well over 100,000 a month so far this year. But many forecasters reckoned a more pronounced hiring slowdown took shape in May and would intensify in the months ahead. Trump's trade strategy lies at the center of the projected downshift. He paused the high double-digit tariffs he slapped on dozens of countries in April and in May agreed to slash levies on Chinese imports from 145% to a still-elevated 30%. China agreed to broadly similar concessions. But the moves hinge on further U.S. deals with China and other countries. And 25% tariffs remain in effect on all imported cars and many goods from Canada and Mexico. This week, Trump hiked fees on steel and aluminum imports to 50% from 25%. And while a trade court last month struck down many of Trump's tariffs, they remain in effect during an appeal, prolonging the uncertainty for businesses. Economists expect the duties to reignite inflation within a month or two and dampen consumer spending. The costs also have heightened business uncertainty, curtailing hiring and investment. How many federal employees are laid off? The Trump administration's Department of Government Efficiency has cut as many as 120,000 federal jobs but many workers have been placed on administrative leave, leaving them on U.S. payrolls pending court cases, Morgan Stanley said in a report. Still, the reductions have started to filter into the jobs numbers. Goldman Sachs estimates federal employment declined by a relatively modest 10,000 in May, adding to the 26,000 government workers that Capital Economics says already have been chopped since February. Are there still immigrants coming to America? Besides toughening enforcement at the southern border, the administration has canceled or declined to renew work permits and other protections for hundreds of thousands of migrants, economist Lydia Boussour of EY-Parthenon wrote in a note to clients. That will likely mean a smaller labor supply that further constrains hiring, especially in industries such as construction and hospitality, she said. Some calendar quirks also could have suppressed employment last month. For technical reasons, a late Easter likely boosted payrolls in April but heralds a lower tally for May as staffing levels returned to normal, Morgan Stanley said. Yet while hiring generally has slowed, other economists figured job growth remained sturdy last month as companies frustrated by labor shortages during the pandemic continued to curtail layoffs. Capital Economics and Barclays both predicted 150,000 jobs gains for May. By the end of the year, however, Barclays believes tariffs, federal layoffs and immigration curbs will slow average monthly job gains to about 75,000.

Bannon prods Trump to cut off Musk: 'He crossed the Rubicon'
Bannon prods Trump to cut off Musk: 'He crossed the Rubicon'

The Herald Scotland

timean hour ago

  • The Herald Scotland

Bannon prods Trump to cut off Musk: 'He crossed the Rubicon'

Bannon has stoked the tension, which began when Musk, a former special government employee who led Trump's Department of Government Efficiency, called on senators to reject Trump's tax cut bill. The two have traded barbs ever since, with Musk suggesting that Trump be impeached and Trump lamenting to reporters on June 5 that he did not know if he and his former pal would be able to repair their relationship. Bannon tightens the screws on Musk In print, radio and podcast interviews, Bannon has piled on Musk. He called on Trump to end the SpaceX and Tesla founder's government contracts. He's also prodded Trump to investigate alleged drug use by the South African-born businessman, as well as his immigration status. "He crossed the Rubicon. It's one thing to make comments about spending on the bill. There's another thing about what he did," Bannon said on NPR's "Morning Edition" program. "You can't come out and say kill the president's most important legislative occurrence of this first term." Musk's claim that Trump is mentioned in undisclosed classified files related to the financier and sex offender Jeffrey Epstein and Musk's affirmative response to a social media post pushing for Trump to be replaced by Vice President JD Vance were too far, Bannon said on NPR, a public broadcasting organization the White House is trying to defund. "It has crossed the line," Bannon said of Musk. "There's no going back." Bannon said in a June 6 podcast he does not consider Musk's ouster a personal victory. "I don't ever look at things like that at all. Right now, it's a national security issue," Bannon said on the UnHerd with Freddie Sayers podcast. He went on to accuse Musk of abusing his position inside the government to try gain access to government secrets to boost his business. DOGE did not deliver on the $1 trillion in savings Musk promised, he said of the government spending-slashing effort. "Where's the money? What was DOGE really doing?" Bannon asked. "We want to make sure DOGE and Elon Musk didn't take any of the data sets for his personal use for his artificial intelligence, which is driving all of his businesses." A clash that was months in the making Bannon's own distaste for Musk dates back to a dispute over temporary visas for highly skilled immigrant laborers. Musk and entrepreneur Vivek Ramaswamy, who Trump initially tapped to co-lead DOGE, pushed for an expansion of the program as way to attract global talent, irritating immigration hawks in the conservative movement. "We're not going to be some anarcho-libertarian (state) run by Big Tech oligarchs -- that's not going to happen," Bannon said on his War Room podcast in December. Bannon told Politico in a June 5 interview that, after the split with Trump, the MAGA movement is now done with Musk. "I think MAGA is now seeing exactly what he was," Bannon said. "I'm just saying, 'Hey, told you -- knew this was gonna happen, folks. Not a hard one.'"

Andrew Doyle: ‘If you support freedom of speech, you have to support people's right to say the things you don't much want to hear'
Andrew Doyle: ‘If you support freedom of speech, you have to support people's right to say the things you don't much want to hear'

Belfast Telegraph

timean hour ago

  • Belfast Telegraph

Andrew Doyle: ‘If you support freedom of speech, you have to support people's right to say the things you don't much want to hear'

Derry writer and commentator Andrew Doyle talks about his new book, The End of Woke, why old-fashioned liberalism needs to make a comeback, and writing a sitcom with Graham Linehan 'I've seen people getting very, very angry about the cancellation of Kneecap,' says Andrew Doyle, the Derry-born writer, political commentator and satirist. 'These are the same people who have called for similar cancellations of others. 'And I'd like to think they would realise that they've sowed the seeds of that by pushing for cancellations when they don't approve [of something] — or whatever it might be. But I'm not sure they've really grasped the hypocrisy.'

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store