WA Liberal MP Andrew Hastie adds to calls for Coalition to dump net zero calling it a 'straitjacket' on party's future
Western Australian MP Andrew Hastie has called for the Liberal Party to dump its commitment to net zero by 2050, claiming it was a 'straitjacket' on the party's future.
The net zero commitment has continued to cause division inside the Liberal and National parties, which are still struggling to come to terms with the Coalition's worst ever defeat at this month's federal election.
Speaking to Four Corners about the defeat and the path forward for the party, Mr Hastie said net zero was one policy that needed to be re-evaluated.
'I think the question of net zero, that's a straitjacket that I'm already getting out of,' he told the ABC.
'The real question is should Australian families and businesses be paying more for their electricity?
'And should we allow this sort of hypocrisy at the heart of our economy to continue whereby we sell coal and gas to India and China, and we deny it to our own people?
'That's the question that I think we need to answer.'
Mr Hastie is not alone in wanting to the Coalition to dump its net zero policy, with Nationals Senator Matt Canavan telling Sky News Australia on Tuesday that the party 'got to get off this ridiculous pursuit of net zero emissions by 2050'.
'Almost every other country is walking away from it. Why are we still costing Australians by pursuing an arbitrary and abstract goal of net zero emissions by 2050?' Senator Canavan said.
The Nationals Senator told Sky News he would not serve on any Coalition frontbench while the policy exists.
'I wish my colleagues all the best, but while we remain committed to this crazy net zero emissions column, I'm not going to serve,' he said.
'If we dump this ridiculous goal, I'll do what I can to serve the team and the country in what are the any role people think I'm capable of.'
In contrast to Mr Hastie and Senator Canavan's stance, multiple Liberals have rejected the idea of dumping the policy, and the Nationals' leadership did not make it one of their policy demands during Coalition negotiations.
Last week, Victorian Liberal Senator Jane Hume said dumping net zero would not be consistent with the message the public had sent the party.
'The electorate has sent us a very clear message what it is that they want in their government… abandoning net zero I don't necessarily think is consistent with that,' Senator Hume said.
NSW Senator Maria Kovacic also argued against dumping the policy during last night's Four Corners episode.
'Most young Australians believe that climate change is real and we have to deliver energy policies that ensure that we reach our net zero targets and that we deliver stable power … that is as cheap as possible' she said.
Mr Hastie is widely considered a future leader of the Liberal Party and has admitted he has the 'desire to lead'.
However the former special forces soldier decided against running earlier this month, telling Sky News Australia it was not the right time for him to take on the job.
'I spoke to my wife Ruth, and it was very clear that I wasn't in a position to lead and be a good dad and husband at the same time,' Mr Hastie said.
'I've got a nine year old, a seven year old, and a three year old… you only get one shot at it, and I decided that I owe that to my family first and foremost.'
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Herald Sun
17 minutes ago
- Herald Sun
TikTok's advertising push as under-16 social media ban looms
Don't miss out on the headlines from Social. Followed categories will be added to My News. TikTok is pushing the app's benefits for teens into as many faces as it can as the under-16 social media ban looms at the end of this year. The social media giant took out sprawling ads in the Australian Financial Review last week, covering 4½ full pages with marketing, promoting the platform's utility for getting teens to read, engage with education and even cast a lure. The newspaper ads, along with a big spend on billboards and bus shelters, comes as the under-16 social media ban is just six months away. Advertisements in the May 26 edition of the AFR claim TikTok serves up 10 million videos in its science, technology, engineering, and maths feed. Another of the full-page ads extols the benefits of the massively popular 'bookTok' – TikTok's literary community. The third subject-specific ad claims Australian teenagers are 'getting outside', inspired by the platform's fishing content. A TikTok Australia spokesman said the company had also invested in billboard and bus shelter ads recently but was unable to provide numbers or details. In six months', any Australian under the age of 16 will be banned from all social media; YouTube has been granted an exemption on educational grounds, drawing the ire of the other platforms. How the social media ban will work is still up in the air. The federal government has been sitting on a report since January concerning Australians' attitudes toward age assurance technologies. A British company has been tasked with trialling which technologies could be used to implement the world first, under-16 ban. On Friday, that UK firm revealed a report on its findings had been pushed back to July. Originally published as TikTok's advertising push as under-16 social media ban looms

Sky News AU
an hour ago
- Sky News AU
‘Unscientific nonsense': Albanese blaming floods and droughts on climate change
Sky News host Chris Kenny slams Prime Minister Anthony Albanese's 'exaggeration' for blaming Australian floods and droughts on climate change. 'Do you remember when he was dealing with a downgraded cyclone in Queensland and the resultant flooding in the leadup to the election, remember he blamed it on climate change,' Mr Kenny said. 'I called this out at the time, it is factually incorrect, it is climate alarmist piffle.'

AU Financial Review
an hour ago
- AU Financial Review
This is what the Soul Patts deal is really about
There was no shortage of nostalgia floating around Australian capital markets on Monday as Washington H Soul Pattinson announced their $14 billion merger with Brickworks, and the end of the cross-shareholding that has bound the two groups together for more than half a century. But investors are a notoriously unsentimental lot and focus very quickly turned to the big question that surrounds this deal: why now?