
‘Proud': Abbie calls out young Aussie voters
In a TikTok video released just two days before Saturday's election, Ms Chatfield implied she had met young voters who were 'ashamed' of who they were voting for.
'If you're ashamed to say who you are voting for, then maybe you shouldn't be voting for that party. Just a little FYI,' she said.
'Maybe you should rethink, if it really aligns with who you are.
'If you get scared, and go 'oh I don't want to talk about politics' when you are asked about how you are voting, maybe rethink the way you are voting.' Influencer and Greens supporter Abbie Chatfield released a TikTok on Thursday urging voters to check the ABC's Vote Compass to better understand their political views. Supplied Credit: News Corp Australia
The reality TV star turned podcaster has backed the Greens in the election, fronting a national Greens ad to 'keep Dutton out'.
Ms Chatfield, a vocal critic of the Liberal Party, has also DJed alongside Greens leader Adam Bandt at a campaign fundraiser.
She previously hosted both Anthony Albanese and Mr Bandt on her podcast It's A Lot, leading to an Australian Electoral Commission review earlier this year. Greens Leader Adam Bandt with influencer Abbie Chatfield at The Brightside in Fortitude Valley. NewsWire/ Glen Campbell Credit: News Corp Australia
The AEC found Ms Chatfield did not breach any electoral laws with her political posts, concluding the interviews were voluntary, audience-driven, and did not require formal authorisation under electoral legislation.
In the TikTok, Ms Chatfield urged voters to check the ABC's Vote Compass to better understand where they fit in the political spectrum.
'Do a vote compass, figure out if it actually aligns with you,' she said.
'You should be proud about who you are voting for. A lot of you aren't.'

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Perth Now
an hour ago
- Perth Now
'Liberal-Green alliance' with parliament to resume
Tasmania is set for an ongoing minority Liberal government after a snap election, a hung parliament and a failed bid by Labor to seize power. Parliament will sit on Tuesday for the first time since the July 19 poll delivered the Liberals 14 seats and Labor 10, both short of the 18 mark required for majority. Liberal leader Jeremy Rockliff was recommissioned as premier but his ongoing support was set to be tested by a Labor no-confidence motion in parliament. Labor leader Dean Winter's attempt to court the cross bench hit a fatal bump on Monday when the five-seat Greens, whose support his party needed, said they could not back the motion. Kristie Johnston and David O'Byrne, two of five independents on the cross bench, have also declared they won't support Labor. "I welcome members of the cross bench indicating they will not support the leader of the opposition's no-confidence motion," Mr Rockliff said. "The time for political games is well and truly over. We must get on with working together for all Tasmanians." The Liberals have in recent days made several policy concessions, including a pledge to ban greyhound racing by 2029 and launch a review into the state's salmon industry. Labor has refused to shift on policy in negotiations with the Greens, but did offer a broad working framework and an independent MP as treasurer. Greens leader Rosalie Woodruff said she was disappointed and frustrated with Mr Winter's "refusal to budge". Mr Winter, whose party's 26 per cent of the primary vote was its worst result in more than a century in Tasmania, accused Mr Rockliff of selling out traditional industries. "Tasmania has witnessed the birth of a Liberal-Green government," he said. "The Greens had a choice to make. They have chosen to support the Liberals." Dr Woodruff said the Greens' lack of confidence in Labor wasn't a vote of support for the Liberals, but she did acknowledge Mr Rockliff had made concessions. The July 19 election was triggered after Mr Rockliff lost a no-confidence motion in June citing Tasmania's ballooning debt and his infrastructure mismanagement. The Liberals, who have been in power since 2014, have governed in minority since 2023. Ms Johnston said the cross bench "tried very hard" during negotiations to ensure Labor could put its best foot forward and deliver change. "They simply have failed. Being more collaborative, they haven't done that," she told reporters.


The Advertiser
11 hours ago
- The Advertiser
Liberals cling to power as Greens thumb nose at Labor
The Liberals will maintain minority government in Tasmania after Labor's post-election bid to take power was sunk by the Greens. Weeks of negotiations have followed a July 19 poll that delivered another hung parliament, with neither the Liberals (14) nor Labor (10) getting the 18 seats needed for majority. Liberal Premier Jeremy Rockliff was recommissioned but Labor leader Dean Winter planned to test his numbers in a no-confidence motion when parliament resumes on Tuesday. But Labor's bid fell flat on Monday, with the five-seat Greens, whose support they require to govern, announcing they were unable to back Mr Winter. Greens leader Rosalie Woodruff, whose party had offered an olive branch to Labor, lashed Mr Winter's lack of compromise. Mr Winter refused to make policy concessions to the cross bench during negotiations and repeatedly ruled out "doing a deal" with the Greens to govern. Mr Winter had put forward a broad "stability framework" and offered to make an independent upper house MP treasurer. "We couldn't give Labor a blank cheque ... when they have shown clear hostility and contempt for working with the Greens and the people we represent," Dr Woodruff said. The Liberals have made several recent policy concessions to woo the cross bench, including a review of salmon farming and a ban on greyhound racing by 2029. Dr Woodruff made it clear the Greens also didn't have confidence in the Liberals and it was with great disappointment that they couldn't work with Mr Winter. The Labor leader had mere hours earlier maintained he was in the running to be premier, at the helm of a Labor Party that picked up 26 per cent of the primary vote - its worst result in Tasmania. Standing alongside salmon workers, he accused Mr Rockliff of backflipping and being untrustworthy by announcing the aquaculture review. Independent Kristie Johnston on Monday also revealed she was unable to support an "uncompromising" Labor, but warned the Liberals were still "on notice". Fellow independent, former Labor leader David O'Byrne, on Sunday threw his support behind Mr Rockliff as premier. "The Labor Party, sadly, had a swing against them and produced their worst electoral outcome in their history," he said. "While it is not a mandate for the Liberal government and I don't agree with a number of policy issues ... that vote cannot be ignored." The Liberals have governed since 2014 and have been in minority since 2023 when two MPs quit the party to sit as independents. The snap election in July, Tasmania's fourth in seven years, delivered a cross bench including five independents and a Shooters, Fishers and Farmers MP. The poll was triggered after a no-confidence motion in Mr Rockliff passed parliament in June with support of Labor, the Greens and several independents. The motion was critical of Tasmania's ballooning net debt and Mr Rockliff's handling of delayed and over-budget infrastructure projects. The Liberals got 40 per cent of the primary vote at the election with a swing of 3.2 per cent, while Labor's vote dipped 3.1 per cent. The Liberals will maintain minority government in Tasmania after Labor's post-election bid to take power was sunk by the Greens. Weeks of negotiations have followed a July 19 poll that delivered another hung parliament, with neither the Liberals (14) nor Labor (10) getting the 18 seats needed for majority. Liberal Premier Jeremy Rockliff was recommissioned but Labor leader Dean Winter planned to test his numbers in a no-confidence motion when parliament resumes on Tuesday. But Labor's bid fell flat on Monday, with the five-seat Greens, whose support they require to govern, announcing they were unable to back Mr Winter. Greens leader Rosalie Woodruff, whose party had offered an olive branch to Labor, lashed Mr Winter's lack of compromise. Mr Winter refused to make policy concessions to the cross bench during negotiations and repeatedly ruled out "doing a deal" with the Greens to govern. Mr Winter had put forward a broad "stability framework" and offered to make an independent upper house MP treasurer. "We couldn't give Labor a blank cheque ... when they have shown clear hostility and contempt for working with the Greens and the people we represent," Dr Woodruff said. The Liberals have made several recent policy concessions to woo the cross bench, including a review of salmon farming and a ban on greyhound racing by 2029. Dr Woodruff made it clear the Greens also didn't have confidence in the Liberals and it was with great disappointment that they couldn't work with Mr Winter. The Labor leader had mere hours earlier maintained he was in the running to be premier, at the helm of a Labor Party that picked up 26 per cent of the primary vote - its worst result in Tasmania. Standing alongside salmon workers, he accused Mr Rockliff of backflipping and being untrustworthy by announcing the aquaculture review. Independent Kristie Johnston on Monday also revealed she was unable to support an "uncompromising" Labor, but warned the Liberals were still "on notice". Fellow independent, former Labor leader David O'Byrne, on Sunday threw his support behind Mr Rockliff as premier. "The Labor Party, sadly, had a swing against them and produced their worst electoral outcome in their history," he said. "While it is not a mandate for the Liberal government and I don't agree with a number of policy issues ... that vote cannot be ignored." The Liberals have governed since 2014 and have been in minority since 2023 when two MPs quit the party to sit as independents. The snap election in July, Tasmania's fourth in seven years, delivered a cross bench including five independents and a Shooters, Fishers and Farmers MP. The poll was triggered after a no-confidence motion in Mr Rockliff passed parliament in June with support of Labor, the Greens and several independents. The motion was critical of Tasmania's ballooning net debt and Mr Rockliff's handling of delayed and over-budget infrastructure projects. The Liberals got 40 per cent of the primary vote at the election with a swing of 3.2 per cent, while Labor's vote dipped 3.1 per cent. The Liberals will maintain minority government in Tasmania after Labor's post-election bid to take power was sunk by the Greens. Weeks of negotiations have followed a July 19 poll that delivered another hung parliament, with neither the Liberals (14) nor Labor (10) getting the 18 seats needed for majority. Liberal Premier Jeremy Rockliff was recommissioned but Labor leader Dean Winter planned to test his numbers in a no-confidence motion when parliament resumes on Tuesday. But Labor's bid fell flat on Monday, with the five-seat Greens, whose support they require to govern, announcing they were unable to back Mr Winter. Greens leader Rosalie Woodruff, whose party had offered an olive branch to Labor, lashed Mr Winter's lack of compromise. Mr Winter refused to make policy concessions to the cross bench during negotiations and repeatedly ruled out "doing a deal" with the Greens to govern. Mr Winter had put forward a broad "stability framework" and offered to make an independent upper house MP treasurer. "We couldn't give Labor a blank cheque ... when they have shown clear hostility and contempt for working with the Greens and the people we represent," Dr Woodruff said. The Liberals have made several recent policy concessions to woo the cross bench, including a review of salmon farming and a ban on greyhound racing by 2029. Dr Woodruff made it clear the Greens also didn't have confidence in the Liberals and it was with great disappointment that they couldn't work with Mr Winter. The Labor leader had mere hours earlier maintained he was in the running to be premier, at the helm of a Labor Party that picked up 26 per cent of the primary vote - its worst result in Tasmania. Standing alongside salmon workers, he accused Mr Rockliff of backflipping and being untrustworthy by announcing the aquaculture review. Independent Kristie Johnston on Monday also revealed she was unable to support an "uncompromising" Labor, but warned the Liberals were still "on notice". Fellow independent, former Labor leader David O'Byrne, on Sunday threw his support behind Mr Rockliff as premier. "The Labor Party, sadly, had a swing against them and produced their worst electoral outcome in their history," he said. "While it is not a mandate for the Liberal government and I don't agree with a number of policy issues ... that vote cannot be ignored." The Liberals have governed since 2014 and have been in minority since 2023 when two MPs quit the party to sit as independents. The snap election in July, Tasmania's fourth in seven years, delivered a cross bench including five independents and a Shooters, Fishers and Farmers MP. The poll was triggered after a no-confidence motion in Mr Rockliff passed parliament in June with support of Labor, the Greens and several independents. The motion was critical of Tasmania's ballooning net debt and Mr Rockliff's handling of delayed and over-budget infrastructure projects. The Liberals got 40 per cent of the primary vote at the election with a swing of 3.2 per cent, while Labor's vote dipped 3.1 per cent. The Liberals will maintain minority government in Tasmania after Labor's post-election bid to take power was sunk by the Greens. Weeks of negotiations have followed a July 19 poll that delivered another hung parliament, with neither the Liberals (14) nor Labor (10) getting the 18 seats needed for majority. Liberal Premier Jeremy Rockliff was recommissioned but Labor leader Dean Winter planned to test his numbers in a no-confidence motion when parliament resumes on Tuesday. But Labor's bid fell flat on Monday, with the five-seat Greens, whose support they require to govern, announcing they were unable to back Mr Winter. Greens leader Rosalie Woodruff, whose party had offered an olive branch to Labor, lashed Mr Winter's lack of compromise. Mr Winter refused to make policy concessions to the cross bench during negotiations and repeatedly ruled out "doing a deal" with the Greens to govern. Mr Winter had put forward a broad "stability framework" and offered to make an independent upper house MP treasurer. "We couldn't give Labor a blank cheque ... when they have shown clear hostility and contempt for working with the Greens and the people we represent," Dr Woodruff said. The Liberals have made several recent policy concessions to woo the cross bench, including a review of salmon farming and a ban on greyhound racing by 2029. Dr Woodruff made it clear the Greens also didn't have confidence in the Liberals and it was with great disappointment that they couldn't work with Mr Winter. The Labor leader had mere hours earlier maintained he was in the running to be premier, at the helm of a Labor Party that picked up 26 per cent of the primary vote - its worst result in Tasmania. Standing alongside salmon workers, he accused Mr Rockliff of backflipping and being untrustworthy by announcing the aquaculture review. Independent Kristie Johnston on Monday also revealed she was unable to support an "uncompromising" Labor, but warned the Liberals were still "on notice". Fellow independent, former Labor leader David O'Byrne, on Sunday threw his support behind Mr Rockliff as premier. "The Labor Party, sadly, had a swing against them and produced their worst electoral outcome in their history," he said. "While it is not a mandate for the Liberal government and I don't agree with a number of policy issues ... that vote cannot be ignored." The Liberals have governed since 2014 and have been in minority since 2023 when two MPs quit the party to sit as independents. The snap election in July, Tasmania's fourth in seven years, delivered a cross bench including five independents and a Shooters, Fishers and Farmers MP. The poll was triggered after a no-confidence motion in Mr Rockliff passed parliament in June with support of Labor, the Greens and several independents. The motion was critical of Tasmania's ballooning net debt and Mr Rockliff's handling of delayed and over-budget infrastructure projects. The Liberals got 40 per cent of the primary vote at the election with a swing of 3.2 per cent, while Labor's vote dipped 3.1 per cent.

AU Financial Review
12 hours ago
- AU Financial Review
Greens block Tasmanian Labor's bid to form minority government
Jeremy Rockliff looks set to remain as Tasmanian premier after the Greens declared they would block the opposition's plans to move another no-confidence motion on the Liberal leader, ending Labor's bid to form minority government and months of political turmoil. Greens leader Rosalie Woodruff said on Monday the minor party had come to a 'united decision' it did not have confidence in Dean Winter, and that the five MPs would vote against the Labor leader's no-confidence motion when parliament sits on Tuesday, the first time since last month's snap election.