Nazis are quietly forming a political party to try to get around the law
The prominent neo-Nazi group that disrupted Anzac Day commemorations is recruiting members to form a new political party, as part of a plan to exploit loopholes in recent anti-vilification laws – and run candidates in the next federal election.
White supremacist leader Thomas Sewell is under strict bail conditions barring him from contacting other members of his neo-Nazi National Socialist Network (NSN), which has seen its websites and social media channels taken down after Sewell and other members were arrested over an Australia Day rally in Adelaide.
Yet The Age can reveal the group has quietly launched a new website, signed by founder Sewell, and is directing people through its remaining Telegram channels to join the NSN's new aspiring political party.
The group needs to reach 1500 verified members before it can apply to the Australian Electoral Commission (AEC) to form an official federal party, which it hopes to do within a year. (The bar for becoming a state party is even lower, at 500 members needed in Victoria.)
The stunt at Melbourne's Shrine of Remembrance on Friday, when neo-Nazis including Jacob Hersant booed in the darkness of an Anzac dawn service, was part of a co-ordinated push to rebrand nationally as 'everyday Australians' fed up with so-called 'woke' politics and so funnel more recruits into their extreme ideologies.
That plan, which is revealed in online records and Sewell's videos for followers, could now be in jeopardy, as bipartisan backlash to the Shrine stunt and other disruptions by fringe agitators this election campaign threatens to build into a national crackdown on far-right extremism.
But Nazi watchers who track the group online, such as The White Rose Society, call their political ambitions serious and frightening. Even if they don't ever get a candidate up at the ballot box, the tactic could help the neo-Nazi group gain false legitimacy as they push further into right-wing politics – and evade crackdowns by authorities.
Extremism expert Josh Roose said Australian neo-Nazis had been successful, for their relatively small numbers, in eclipsing other groups in the far right, including in recent stunts during the election. 'Now they're following in the footsteps of Hitler [into politics], though they have zero chance of actually getting elected, but they'll exploit every loophole they can.'
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The Advertiser
4 hours ago
- The Advertiser
Liberal MP complaint referred to anti-corruption body
A Liberal MP has been referred to an anti-corruption body over an offer that could have deferred a former party's whopping legal bill in exchange for guaranteed preselection. A member of the public made a complaint about Victorian Liberal Moira Deeming to the state's Independent Broad-based Anti-corruption Commission (IBAC) after reports of the proposed deal, which fell over. Anyone can make a referral to IBAC but that does do not automatically trigger a full investigation, with the body aiming to assess all complaints within 45 days. Former Liberal leader John Pesutto owes $2.3 million in legal costs to Mrs Deeming after the Federal Court found he defamed her by implying she was associated with neo-Nazis who gatecrashed a Melbourne rally she attended in 2023. Mr Pesutto faces bankruptcy and a forced exit from parliament unless the money is paid or a payment plan sorted out within weeks. On Wednesday, a member of the public who said he was "frankly outraged" by the reports of the proposed deal emailed Liberal MPs to notify them he had referred the matter to the corruption body. "If it takes people like me - outsiders - to initiate this kind of action and help uphold the standards of integrity that all political parties should meet, then I will continue to do so without hesitation," he wrote in the email, obtained by AAP. The man who made the complaint told AAP he is not a member of the Liberal Party but had been a member of three other political parties in the past. On Sunday, Mrs Deeming wrote to Mr Pesutto, his successor Brad Battin and Victorian Liberal president Philip Davis with a series of demands that would spare Mr Pesutto bankruptcy and see her endorsed for pre-selection ahead of the November 2026 election. In the letter, she said she was "dismayed" the Liberal Party was considering a request the state party assist Mr Pesutto meet his financial obligations to her. "It is because of the extraordinary support that I have received from rank-and-file members that I make this offer with the intention that the funds they have raised to fight the Labor Party remain solely directed to that important objective," she wrote. She demanded Mr Pesutto pay the roughly $760,000 he has raised so far, while the rest of the debt would be put on ice until 2027. Mrs Deeming's other requests included that the party release an unreserved apology to her. "I have suffered through a gruelling two and half years where almost every offer I made to negotiate a settlement was rejected," she wrote. "This is my final attempt to spare the Liberal Party further harm and to afford Mr Pesutto, and his family, the dignity that was denied to me, my husband and my children." A special resolution would have had to be passed to endorse preselection for her upper house seat. Traditionally, Liberal preselection is finalised through a vote of rank-and-file members. Mrs Deeming has been contacted for comment. A Liberal MP has been referred to an anti-corruption body over an offer that could have deferred a former party's whopping legal bill in exchange for guaranteed preselection. A member of the public made a complaint about Victorian Liberal Moira Deeming to the state's Independent Broad-based Anti-corruption Commission (IBAC) after reports of the proposed deal, which fell over. Anyone can make a referral to IBAC but that does do not automatically trigger a full investigation, with the body aiming to assess all complaints within 45 days. Former Liberal leader John Pesutto owes $2.3 million in legal costs to Mrs Deeming after the Federal Court found he defamed her by implying she was associated with neo-Nazis who gatecrashed a Melbourne rally she attended in 2023. Mr Pesutto faces bankruptcy and a forced exit from parliament unless the money is paid or a payment plan sorted out within weeks. On Wednesday, a member of the public who said he was "frankly outraged" by the reports of the proposed deal emailed Liberal MPs to notify them he had referred the matter to the corruption body. "If it takes people like me - outsiders - to initiate this kind of action and help uphold the standards of integrity that all political parties should meet, then I will continue to do so without hesitation," he wrote in the email, obtained by AAP. The man who made the complaint told AAP he is not a member of the Liberal Party but had been a member of three other political parties in the past. On Sunday, Mrs Deeming wrote to Mr Pesutto, his successor Brad Battin and Victorian Liberal president Philip Davis with a series of demands that would spare Mr Pesutto bankruptcy and see her endorsed for pre-selection ahead of the November 2026 election. In the letter, she said she was "dismayed" the Liberal Party was considering a request the state party assist Mr Pesutto meet his financial obligations to her. "It is because of the extraordinary support that I have received from rank-and-file members that I make this offer with the intention that the funds they have raised to fight the Labor Party remain solely directed to that important objective," she wrote. She demanded Mr Pesutto pay the roughly $760,000 he has raised so far, while the rest of the debt would be put on ice until 2027. Mrs Deeming's other requests included that the party release an unreserved apology to her. "I have suffered through a gruelling two and half years where almost every offer I made to negotiate a settlement was rejected," she wrote. "This is my final attempt to spare the Liberal Party further harm and to afford Mr Pesutto, and his family, the dignity that was denied to me, my husband and my children." A special resolution would have had to be passed to endorse preselection for her upper house seat. Traditionally, Liberal preselection is finalised through a vote of rank-and-file members. Mrs Deeming has been contacted for comment. A Liberal MP has been referred to an anti-corruption body over an offer that could have deferred a former party's whopping legal bill in exchange for guaranteed preselection. A member of the public made a complaint about Victorian Liberal Moira Deeming to the state's Independent Broad-based Anti-corruption Commission (IBAC) after reports of the proposed deal, which fell over. Anyone can make a referral to IBAC but that does do not automatically trigger a full investigation, with the body aiming to assess all complaints within 45 days. Former Liberal leader John Pesutto owes $2.3 million in legal costs to Mrs Deeming after the Federal Court found he defamed her by implying she was associated with neo-Nazis who gatecrashed a Melbourne rally she attended in 2023. Mr Pesutto faces bankruptcy and a forced exit from parliament unless the money is paid or a payment plan sorted out within weeks. On Wednesday, a member of the public who said he was "frankly outraged" by the reports of the proposed deal emailed Liberal MPs to notify them he had referred the matter to the corruption body. "If it takes people like me - outsiders - to initiate this kind of action and help uphold the standards of integrity that all political parties should meet, then I will continue to do so without hesitation," he wrote in the email, obtained by AAP. The man who made the complaint told AAP he is not a member of the Liberal Party but had been a member of three other political parties in the past. On Sunday, Mrs Deeming wrote to Mr Pesutto, his successor Brad Battin and Victorian Liberal president Philip Davis with a series of demands that would spare Mr Pesutto bankruptcy and see her endorsed for pre-selection ahead of the November 2026 election. In the letter, she said she was "dismayed" the Liberal Party was considering a request the state party assist Mr Pesutto meet his financial obligations to her. "It is because of the extraordinary support that I have received from rank-and-file members that I make this offer with the intention that the funds they have raised to fight the Labor Party remain solely directed to that important objective," she wrote. She demanded Mr Pesutto pay the roughly $760,000 he has raised so far, while the rest of the debt would be put on ice until 2027. Mrs Deeming's other requests included that the party release an unreserved apology to her. "I have suffered through a gruelling two and half years where almost every offer I made to negotiate a settlement was rejected," she wrote. "This is my final attempt to spare the Liberal Party further harm and to afford Mr Pesutto, and his family, the dignity that was denied to me, my husband and my children." A special resolution would have had to be passed to endorse preselection for her upper house seat. Traditionally, Liberal preselection is finalised through a vote of rank-and-file members. Mrs Deeming has been contacted for comment. A Liberal MP has been referred to an anti-corruption body over an offer that could have deferred a former party's whopping legal bill in exchange for guaranteed preselection. A member of the public made a complaint about Victorian Liberal Moira Deeming to the state's Independent Broad-based Anti-corruption Commission (IBAC) after reports of the proposed deal, which fell over. Anyone can make a referral to IBAC but that does do not automatically trigger a full investigation, with the body aiming to assess all complaints within 45 days. Former Liberal leader John Pesutto owes $2.3 million in legal costs to Mrs Deeming after the Federal Court found he defamed her by implying she was associated with neo-Nazis who gatecrashed a Melbourne rally she attended in 2023. Mr Pesutto faces bankruptcy and a forced exit from parliament unless the money is paid or a payment plan sorted out within weeks. On Wednesday, a member of the public who said he was "frankly outraged" by the reports of the proposed deal emailed Liberal MPs to notify them he had referred the matter to the corruption body. "If it takes people like me - outsiders - to initiate this kind of action and help uphold the standards of integrity that all political parties should meet, then I will continue to do so without hesitation," he wrote in the email, obtained by AAP. The man who made the complaint told AAP he is not a member of the Liberal Party but had been a member of three other political parties in the past. On Sunday, Mrs Deeming wrote to Mr Pesutto, his successor Brad Battin and Victorian Liberal president Philip Davis with a series of demands that would spare Mr Pesutto bankruptcy and see her endorsed for pre-selection ahead of the November 2026 election. In the letter, she said she was "dismayed" the Liberal Party was considering a request the state party assist Mr Pesutto meet his financial obligations to her. "It is because of the extraordinary support that I have received from rank-and-file members that I make this offer with the intention that the funds they have raised to fight the Labor Party remain solely directed to that important objective," she wrote. She demanded Mr Pesutto pay the roughly $760,000 he has raised so far, while the rest of the debt would be put on ice until 2027. Mrs Deeming's other requests included that the party release an unreserved apology to her. "I have suffered through a gruelling two and half years where almost every offer I made to negotiate a settlement was rejected," she wrote. "This is my final attempt to spare the Liberal Party further harm and to afford Mr Pesutto, and his family, the dignity that was denied to me, my husband and my children." A special resolution would have had to be passed to endorse preselection for her upper house seat. Traditionally, Liberal preselection is finalised through a vote of rank-and-file members. Mrs Deeming has been contacted for comment.


Perth Now
6 hours ago
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Liberal MP complaint referred to anti-corruption body
A Liberal MP has been referred to an anti-corruption body over an offer that could have deferred a former party's whopping legal bill in exchange for guaranteed preselection. A member of the public made a complaint about Victorian Liberal Moira Deeming to the state's Independent Broad-based Anti-corruption Commission (IBAC) after reports of the proposed deal, which fell over. Anyone can make a referral to IBAC but that does do not automatically trigger a full investigation, with the body aiming to assess all complaints within 45 days. Former Liberal leader John Pesutto owes $2.3 million in legal costs to Mrs Deeming after the Federal Court found he defamed her by implying she was associated with neo-Nazis who gatecrashed a Melbourne rally she attended in 2023. Mr Pesutto faces bankruptcy and a forced exit from parliament unless the money is paid or a payment plan sorted out within weeks. On Wednesday, a member of the public who said he was "frankly outraged" by the reports of the proposed deal emailed Liberal MPs to notify them he had referred the matter to the corruption body. "If it takes people like me - outsiders - to initiate this kind of action and help uphold the standards of integrity that all political parties should meet, then I will continue to do so without hesitation," he wrote in the email, obtained by AAP. The man who made the complaint told AAP he is not a member of the Liberal Party but had been a member of three other political parties in the past. On Sunday, Mrs Deeming wrote to Mr Pesutto, his successor Brad Battin and Victorian Liberal president Philip Davis with a series of demands that would spare Mr Pesutto bankruptcy and see her endorsed for pre-selection ahead of the November 2026 election. In the letter, she said she was "dismayed" the Liberal Party was considering a request the state party assist Mr Pesutto meet his financial obligations to her. "It is because of the extraordinary support that I have received from rank-and-file members that I make this offer with the intention that the funds they have raised to fight the Labor Party remain solely directed to that important objective," she wrote. She demanded Mr Pesutto pay the roughly $760,000 he has raised so far, while the rest of the debt would be put on ice until 2027. Mrs Deeming's other requests included that the party release an unreserved apology to her. "I have suffered through a gruelling two and half years where almost every offer I made to negotiate a settlement was rejected," she wrote. "This is my final attempt to spare the Liberal Party further harm and to afford Mr Pesutto, and his family, the dignity that was denied to me, my husband and my children." A special resolution would have had to be passed to endorse preselection for her upper house seat. Traditionally, Liberal preselection is finalised through a vote of rank-and-file members. Mrs Deeming has been contacted for comment.


The Advertiser
11 hours ago
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Ukrainian army says it struck Russian gunpowder plant
The Ukrainian military says it has struck a major Russian gunpowder plant in the western Tambov region, causing a fire at the site. The Ukrainian military characterised the plant as one of the main facilities in Russia's military industrial complex. "It produces gunpowder for various types of small arms, artillery and rocket systems," it said in a statement on Telegram. Tambov regional Governor Yevgeny Pervyshov said early on Wednesday that Russian defences had repelled a "massive attack" by Ukrainian drones on the town of Kotovsk, which independent Russian media identified as the site of a gunpowder plant. He said one downed drone had caused a fire but no casualties, and the situation was under control. Pervyshov also told people not to film and publish images of air defence operations and attempted attacks, as this would provide "direct assistance to the enemy". The Tambov gunpowder plant produces propellant powders used in charges for ammunition for 122 mm and 152 mm howitzers, according to a report from the Royal United Services Institute and the Open Source Centre. The Ukrainian military also said that it recorded explosions at an ammunition depot in Russia's Kursk region and an airfield depot in Russia's Voronezh region. Reuters was not able to independently confirm the incidents. Ukraine accepted the bodies of 1212 of its fallen soldiers from Russia after days of dispute, the Ukrainian agency dealing with prisoners of war said on Wednesday. The soldiers died in battles in Russia's Kursk region and the Ukrainian regions of Kharkiv, Luhansk, Donetsk, Zaporizhzhia and Kherson, the agency said. Russia received 27 killed soldiers in return, Russian chief negotiator Vladimir Medinsky said. "Now they can be laid to rest in a Christian manner," he wrote on Telegram. Russia has for days accused Ukraine of failing to accept the remains, and called on Ukrainian authorities to comply with agreements reached between the warring parties in talks in Istanbul at the beginning of the month. Russia transported the bodies ready for handover over the weekend in what it termed a "humanitarian action" while Ukraine said that no agreement on a handover date had been reached. The Istanbul talks provided for the return of the remains of more than 6000 fallen soldiers from Russia to Ukraine. Work on implementing the Istanbul agreements will continue, Medinsky said, with an exchange of seriously wounded prisoners of war to take place on Thursday. Ukraine and Russia had already exchanged an unspecified number of prisoners in recent days. In Istanbul, it was agreed that each side would release in stages 1200 prisoners - those under 25, the seriously wounded and the seriously ill. Ukraine has been defending itself against a Russian invasion for more than three years. During the war, there have been repeated exchanges of prisoners and the return of bodies. A Russian drone strike on the eastern Ukrainian city of Kharkiv killed at least two people and injured dozens, local media reported early on Wednesday. with DPA The Ukrainian military says it has struck a major Russian gunpowder plant in the western Tambov region, causing a fire at the site. The Ukrainian military characterised the plant as one of the main facilities in Russia's military industrial complex. "It produces gunpowder for various types of small arms, artillery and rocket systems," it said in a statement on Telegram. Tambov regional Governor Yevgeny Pervyshov said early on Wednesday that Russian defences had repelled a "massive attack" by Ukrainian drones on the town of Kotovsk, which independent Russian media identified as the site of a gunpowder plant. He said one downed drone had caused a fire but no casualties, and the situation was under control. Pervyshov also told people not to film and publish images of air defence operations and attempted attacks, as this would provide "direct assistance to the enemy". The Tambov gunpowder plant produces propellant powders used in charges for ammunition for 122 mm and 152 mm howitzers, according to a report from the Royal United Services Institute and the Open Source Centre. The Ukrainian military also said that it recorded explosions at an ammunition depot in Russia's Kursk region and an airfield depot in Russia's Voronezh region. Reuters was not able to independently confirm the incidents. Ukraine accepted the bodies of 1212 of its fallen soldiers from Russia after days of dispute, the Ukrainian agency dealing with prisoners of war said on Wednesday. The soldiers died in battles in Russia's Kursk region and the Ukrainian regions of Kharkiv, Luhansk, Donetsk, Zaporizhzhia and Kherson, the agency said. Russia received 27 killed soldiers in return, Russian chief negotiator Vladimir Medinsky said. "Now they can be laid to rest in a Christian manner," he wrote on Telegram. Russia has for days accused Ukraine of failing to accept the remains, and called on Ukrainian authorities to comply with agreements reached between the warring parties in talks in Istanbul at the beginning of the month. Russia transported the bodies ready for handover over the weekend in what it termed a "humanitarian action" while Ukraine said that no agreement on a handover date had been reached. The Istanbul talks provided for the return of the remains of more than 6000 fallen soldiers from Russia to Ukraine. Work on implementing the Istanbul agreements will continue, Medinsky said, with an exchange of seriously wounded prisoners of war to take place on Thursday. Ukraine and Russia had already exchanged an unspecified number of prisoners in recent days. In Istanbul, it was agreed that each side would release in stages 1200 prisoners - those under 25, the seriously wounded and the seriously ill. Ukraine has been defending itself against a Russian invasion for more than three years. During the war, there have been repeated exchanges of prisoners and the return of bodies. A Russian drone strike on the eastern Ukrainian city of Kharkiv killed at least two people and injured dozens, local media reported early on Wednesday. with DPA The Ukrainian military says it has struck a major Russian gunpowder plant in the western Tambov region, causing a fire at the site. The Ukrainian military characterised the plant as one of the main facilities in Russia's military industrial complex. "It produces gunpowder for various types of small arms, artillery and rocket systems," it said in a statement on Telegram. Tambov regional Governor Yevgeny Pervyshov said early on Wednesday that Russian defences had repelled a "massive attack" by Ukrainian drones on the town of Kotovsk, which independent Russian media identified as the site of a gunpowder plant. He said one downed drone had caused a fire but no casualties, and the situation was under control. Pervyshov also told people not to film and publish images of air defence operations and attempted attacks, as this would provide "direct assistance to the enemy". The Tambov gunpowder plant produces propellant powders used in charges for ammunition for 122 mm and 152 mm howitzers, according to a report from the Royal United Services Institute and the Open Source Centre. The Ukrainian military also said that it recorded explosions at an ammunition depot in Russia's Kursk region and an airfield depot in Russia's Voronezh region. Reuters was not able to independently confirm the incidents. Ukraine accepted the bodies of 1212 of its fallen soldiers from Russia after days of dispute, the Ukrainian agency dealing with prisoners of war said on Wednesday. The soldiers died in battles in Russia's Kursk region and the Ukrainian regions of Kharkiv, Luhansk, Donetsk, Zaporizhzhia and Kherson, the agency said. Russia received 27 killed soldiers in return, Russian chief negotiator Vladimir Medinsky said. "Now they can be laid to rest in a Christian manner," he wrote on Telegram. Russia has for days accused Ukraine of failing to accept the remains, and called on Ukrainian authorities to comply with agreements reached between the warring parties in talks in Istanbul at the beginning of the month. Russia transported the bodies ready for handover over the weekend in what it termed a "humanitarian action" while Ukraine said that no agreement on a handover date had been reached. The Istanbul talks provided for the return of the remains of more than 6000 fallen soldiers from Russia to Ukraine. Work on implementing the Istanbul agreements will continue, Medinsky said, with an exchange of seriously wounded prisoners of war to take place on Thursday. Ukraine and Russia had already exchanged an unspecified number of prisoners in recent days. In Istanbul, it was agreed that each side would release in stages 1200 prisoners - those under 25, the seriously wounded and the seriously ill. Ukraine has been defending itself against a Russian invasion for more than three years. During the war, there have been repeated exchanges of prisoners and the return of bodies. A Russian drone strike on the eastern Ukrainian city of Kharkiv killed at least two people and injured dozens, local media reported early on Wednesday. with DPA The Ukrainian military says it has struck a major Russian gunpowder plant in the western Tambov region, causing a fire at the site. The Ukrainian military characterised the plant as one of the main facilities in Russia's military industrial complex. "It produces gunpowder for various types of small arms, artillery and rocket systems," it said in a statement on Telegram. Tambov regional Governor Yevgeny Pervyshov said early on Wednesday that Russian defences had repelled a "massive attack" by Ukrainian drones on the town of Kotovsk, which independent Russian media identified as the site of a gunpowder plant. He said one downed drone had caused a fire but no casualties, and the situation was under control. Pervyshov also told people not to film and publish images of air defence operations and attempted attacks, as this would provide "direct assistance to the enemy". The Tambov gunpowder plant produces propellant powders used in charges for ammunition for 122 mm and 152 mm howitzers, according to a report from the Royal United Services Institute and the Open Source Centre. The Ukrainian military also said that it recorded explosions at an ammunition depot in Russia's Kursk region and an airfield depot in Russia's Voronezh region. Reuters was not able to independently confirm the incidents. Ukraine accepted the bodies of 1212 of its fallen soldiers from Russia after days of dispute, the Ukrainian agency dealing with prisoners of war said on Wednesday. The soldiers died in battles in Russia's Kursk region and the Ukrainian regions of Kharkiv, Luhansk, Donetsk, Zaporizhzhia and Kherson, the agency said. Russia received 27 killed soldiers in return, Russian chief negotiator Vladimir Medinsky said. "Now they can be laid to rest in a Christian manner," he wrote on Telegram. Russia has for days accused Ukraine of failing to accept the remains, and called on Ukrainian authorities to comply with agreements reached between the warring parties in talks in Istanbul at the beginning of the month. Russia transported the bodies ready for handover over the weekend in what it termed a "humanitarian action" while Ukraine said that no agreement on a handover date had been reached. The Istanbul talks provided for the return of the remains of more than 6000 fallen soldiers from Russia to Ukraine. Work on implementing the Istanbul agreements will continue, Medinsky said, with an exchange of seriously wounded prisoners of war to take place on Thursday. Ukraine and Russia had already exchanged an unspecified number of prisoners in recent days. In Istanbul, it was agreed that each side would release in stages 1200 prisoners - those under 25, the seriously wounded and the seriously ill. Ukraine has been defending itself against a Russian invasion for more than three years. During the war, there have been repeated exchanges of prisoners and the return of bodies. A Russian drone strike on the eastern Ukrainian city of Kharkiv killed at least two people and injured dozens, local media reported early on Wednesday. with DPA