logo
Liberal turmoil continues over drunken rort allegations

Liberal turmoil continues over drunken rort allegations

Perth Now2 days ago

Turmoil continues in a state Liberal Party over allegations of a drunken taxpayer-funded car rort as an MP demands an explanation from her colleague.
The controversy involves tennis ace turned Victorian Liberal deputy Sam Groth, who used a colleague's chauffeur-driven vehicle to take him and his wife home from the Australian Open in January 2024.
Mr Groth hosted a political fundraiser with Nationals MP Jade Benham earlier in the day before entering a party zone at the tennis where he was accused of getting "smashed", The Herald Sun reports.
Then-opposition upper house leader Georgie Crozier lent him her car for the trip home and said Victorians "deserve a lot better".
"I'm incredibly disappointed," Ms Crozier told reporters on Friday afternoon.
"I think that Sam needs to explain his actions. I can't."
Mr Groth was shadow minister for tourism, sport and events at the time, and the car was used for a trip from Melbourne Park to Rye on the Mornington Peninsula, a distance of about 100km.
In a statement, the Nepean MP said he has nothing to hide and attended the 2024 Australian Open in both an official capacity and personal capacity.
"I was at the event to meet various stakeholders and attend meetings before being part of a fundraising initiative," he said.
"The accusations around intoxication are wrong.
"Everything was and is above board."
In 2025, Mr Groth spent more than $300 on accommodation when he attended a March Formula One Glamour on the Grid event and almost $1000 on an Adelaide trip when he met with "key stakeholders" which coincided with the LIV Golf tournament, according to travel allowance claims.
Liberal leader Brad Battin stood by Mr Groth and said he was confident rules had been followed.
"Going to the events does pass the pub test," Mr Battin said.
Under Victoria's ministerial code of conduct, public resources must not be used for or political party purposes or "improper personal or private advantage or benefit for themselves or any other person".
It comes as the Victorian Liberals grapple with the aftermath of a high-profile defamation showdown between MP Moira Deeming and former Leader John Pesutto, who the Federal Court found had defamed the first term MP.
The court has ordered the former leader to pay $2.3 million in legal costs and Mrs Deeming has said she is preparing to file a bankruptcy notice against him.
In 2016, Labor MP Steve Herbert resigned as a minister after his taxpayer-funded driver to chauffeured his two dogs, Patch and Ted, between his homes in Melbourne and central Victoria.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

In Pictures: May 2025
In Pictures: May 2025

AU Financial Review

time6 hours ago

  • AU Financial Review

In Pictures: May 2025

Prime Minister Anthony Albanese, Defence Minister Richard Marles, Foreign Affairs Minister Penny Wong and Trade Minister Don Farrell at Labor's first caucus meeting since being re-elected in Canberra. James Brickwood No.191 on the Rich List, Margaret Dymond with her sons, Penrite chief executive Toby, Jon and Nigel, at a manufacturing and warehouse site in Dandenong, Victoria. Arsineh Houspian Then-opposition leader Peter Dutton, surrounded by his family, concedes defeat against Prime Minister Anthony Albanese during the election night Liberal function at the W Hotel in Brisbane. James Brickwood Carolina Eyck and her theremin. She has invented new gestures and sounds with her instrument and is on tour with Australian Chamber Orchestra. Oscar Colman The Pillars – a new tech-focussed networking club in Sydney – co-founders Steve Grace, left, and Bradley Delamare, with head of memberships Rosie Cardoe. Louie Douvis Chef Daniel Migliaccio and his mother, Desolina Teresa making pasta together at Studio Amaro on Chapel Street in Melbourne. Arsineh Houspian Founder of House Made Hospitality Justin Newton at the group's Island Radio venue in Redfern, Sydney. Oscar Colman Former minister for foreign affairs and now chancellor of ANU, Julie Bishop at the Ace Hotel in Sydney. Louie Douvis Having made a fortune and now giving it away, Nicolas Berggruen takes a worldly view. And he's finding ever more things to admire about Australia. Alina Gozin'a Annabelle Gfeller at home in Sydney with some of her own artwork. Her dress is by Shona Joy. 'Wearing colour is my thing.' Louie Douvis Then-Greens leader Adam Bandt, with wife Claudia Perkins, concedes defeat after losing his seat in the federal election. Wayne Taylor Lawyer and banker, turned shareholder activist, David Kingston at his home in Vaucluse. Dominic Lorrimer Penhaligon's global general manager Julia Koeppen in the QVB flagship. Louise Kennerley Fashion chief executive Kellie Hush at home, where she spends an hour every weekend sorting her wardrobe. Louie Douvis Pavo and Heidi Walker of Walker Seafoods in Mooloolaba on the Sunshine Coast in Queensland. Dean Saffron Ana Forde is a senior gold consultant and team leader at the Collins Street address of Guardian Vaults. Eamon Gallagher 2025 Archibald Prize winner Julie Fragar, right, and her subject, Justene Williams, at the Art Gallery of NSW. Sitthixay Ditthavong Steven Lew is the executive chairman of Global Retail Brands, which owns the homewares chains House and Robin's Kitchen. Louis Trerise Nationals deputy leader Kevin Hogan (left), Nationals leader David Littleproud and Nationals senator Bridget McKenzie in Canberra. Alex Ellinghausen Liberal Party leader Sussan Ley and new deputy leader Ted O'Brien after a Liberal Party meeting. James Brickwood Minister for Communications and Sport Anika Wells (left) during a swearing-in ceremony of the new ministry with Governor-General Sam Mostyn. Alex Ellinghausen Anthony Albanese arrives in Indonesia and is met by Airlangga Hartarto, Indonesia's co-ordinating minister for economic affairs. Alex Ellinghausen West Australian Premier Roger Cook in Perth. Trevor Collens Teal MP Monique Ryan with her supporters at Malvern headquarters in Melbourne. Luis Enrique Ascui Victorian Premier Jacinta Allan and Treasurer Jaclyn Symes during a doorstop in Parkville Station, Melbourne. Justin McManus Reserve Bank governor Michele Bullock announces a second rate cut this year amid highly uncertain times. Louie Douvis Fortescue executive chairman and founder Andrew Forrest at the Financial Review Mining Summit 2025 in Perth. Ross Swanborough Webjet's new chief executive, Katrina Barry, lives in Sydney but works in Melbourne. Eamon Gallagher Caterina Borsato in her restaurant, Caterina's Cucina e Bar in Melbourne CBD. Louis Trerise

‘Fork in the road': How a failed nuclear plot locked in Australia's renewable future
‘Fork in the road': How a failed nuclear plot locked in Australia's renewable future

The Age

time8 hours ago

  • The Age

‘Fork in the road': How a failed nuclear plot locked in Australia's renewable future

When Australians went to the polls and voted Anthony Albanese back as prime minister, they also voted for something that will outlive the next election: the power industry's guaranteed switch from coal to renewable energy. What they didn't vote for were state-owned nuclear reactors, forced delays of coal-fired power station closures and a slew of other Coalition promises widely viewed as threats to the country's era-defining challenge of cutting harmful emissions while keeping electricity supply and prices steady. Although times remain testing in the energy sector, a feeling of relief is clear. 'The nuclear conversation is dead and buried for the foreseeable future,' said an executive at one of Australia's biggest power suppliers, who asked not to be named. Even as the Nationals keep arguing for a nuclear future, any genuine suggestion that atomic facilities could still be built in time to replace retiring coal plants after the next election rolls around was now downright 'ridiculous', said another, adding that renewable energy was on track to surpass 60 per cent of the grid by 2028. 'That's great for the energy sector – it simplifies the path forward,' they said. Make no mistake, a seismic shift across the grid has been well under way for years now. Australia's coal-fired power stations – the backbone of the system for half a century – have been breaking down often and closing down earlier, with most remaining plants slated to shut within a decade. At the same time, power station owners including AGL, Origin Energy and EnergyAustralia are joining a rush of other investors in piling billions of dollars into large-scale renewables and batteries to expand the share of their power that comes from the sun, wind and water. The federal government has an ambitious target for renewable energy to make up 82 per cent of the grid by 2030. 'There won't be a renewable energy industry in 2030; it will just be the energy industry.' Andrew Richards, Energy Users Association of Australia The task of balancing a system dominated by less-predictable renewables becomes much more challenging, and requires the multibillion-dollar pipeline of private investment in the transition to continue. But ousted opposition leader Peter Dutton, before losing the May 3 federal election and his own seat, hatched a plan to change that course dramatically. A grid powered mainly by renewables would never be able to 'keep the lights on', Dutton insisted. Instead, he declared, a Coalition government would tear up Australia's legislated 2030 emissions-reduction commitments, cut short the rollout of renewables, force the extensions of coal-fired generators beyond their owners' retirement plans and eventually replace them with seven nuclear-powered generators, built at the taxpayer's expense, sometime before 2050. For Australians who wanted to see urgent action to tackle climate change – and investors at the forefront of the shift to cleaner power – the campaign to dump near-term climate targets in favour of nuclear energy came at the worst possible time. Some likened it to a 'near-death experience' for the momentum of the shift to a cleaner, modern energy system that would have wiped out investor confidence and killed off billions of dollars of future renewable projects. 'When you reflect on the significance of energy in the campaign, it's reasonable to say this was a fork in the road,' said Kane Thornton, outgoing chief executive of the Clean Energy Council. Loading The Coalition was convinced it was onto a winner. The government had been on the nose in the polls, cost-of-living stresses were everywhere, and Australians were more worried about the size of their electricity bills than where their electrons were coming from. Dutton argued for months that nuclear plants would be the best way to keep prices down, even though almost no one agreed with him. 'I'm very happy for the election to be a referendum on energy – on nuclear,' he said. In the end, the idea proved too toxic for voters. It delivered big swings against Dutton's candidates in electorates chosen to host reactors, while support for Labor grew in many of the places selected to develop massive offshore wind farms, which the Coalition had planned to scrap. The decisive election result 'locks in' the government's ambitious push for an electricity grid almost entirely powered by renewables, said Leonard Quong, the head of Australian research at BloombergNEF. 'The Labor Party's landslide victory … is a win for climate, clean energy and the country's decarbonisation trajectory,' he said. Loading The Albanese government's plan to transform the grid as more coal-fired plants exit is backed up by modelling from the Australian Energy Market Operator. It includes accelerating the build-out of renewables, backed up by thousands of kilometres of extra power lines, storage assets such as batteries and pumped hydroelectric dams to stash clean energy for when it's not sunny or windy, and a small but essential fleet of gas-fired power stations. Over the coming decade, the government's flagship renewable energy policy, known as the Capacity Investment Scheme (CIS), is expected to underwrite the financing of enough new wind and solar farms to double Australia's renewable energy generation capacity, according to BloombergNEF, plus a seven-fold increase in storage. As things stand, Australia is on track to fall shy of its target for renewables to supply 82 per cent of the grid by 2030. But even if it does, a massive increase is still inevitable. The renewables build-out hit record speed last year, said global consultancy Rystad Energy, putting renewable sources on course to surge from 40 per cent to 65 per cent of the grid by the end of the decade. The government's ambitious targets were 'driving significant change', said Andrew Richards of the Energy Users Association of Australia, representing major manufacturers. 'There won't be a renewable energy industry in 2030 – it will just be the energy industry,' he said. Still, there are some who work in the energy sector who think the door should not be closed on nuclear power permanently. Although nuclear is not seen as a viable option for the 2030s or even 2040s (CSIRO calculates the first reactor would take at least 16 years to build), EnergyAustralia chief Mark Collette thinks the technology is at least 'worth considering' as part of a much-longer-horizon energy mix – for instance, when the next generation of large-scale wind farms retires in 20 to 25 years. There are also questions about whether there will be enough renewable energy, supported by gas, to meet ballooning demand in the 2050s and beyond, especially if the rise of electrification, electric vehicles, artificial intelligence and energy-hungry data centres overshoots current forecasts. 'The gap left by coal will be filled by renewables, but what if we've got demand [forecasts] wrong?' said Matt Rennie, co-chief executive of energy consultancy Rennie Advisory. 'This is where the long-term future for nuclear energy becomes interesting – it makes sense to have the conversation.' For now, sidelining the nuclear debate will empower the sector to double down on the investment boom into wind, solar and storage projects to get ready for a fast-approaching future without coal, energy companies say. Loading There are also hopes that it will recast the focus on big challenges that still stand in the way of a smooth transition. These include the soaring cost of building high-voltage power lines needed to connect far-flung renewable energy zones to major cities, resistance among communities asked to host new energy infrastructure, and an impending domestic shortfall of natural gas that will be needed to power a renewed fleet of gas-fired turbines. Shannon Hyde, local boss of French energy giant Engie, said policy certainty was 'good for business and investment confidence' as the company sought to progress plans for more large-scale renewable generation and storage projects in Australia. 'But local challenges remain,' he said. 'We know the energy transition will depend on a partnered approach with ambitious and purposeful governments.' For Kane Thornton, who steps down as head of the Clean Energy Council in August after 10 years, every minute spent talking about nuclear energy was a minute that could have been spent addressing matters that were 'real and important'. 'I think we will look back on this and shake our heads at it as another distraction and another chapter of the quite silly energy policy that we've debated in this country for the past decade,' Thornton said.

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