West coast spending spirals as Liberals and teals battle for ‘the golden prize'
Spending by the WA Liberal Party and teal independent Kate Chaney has reached unprecedented levels in the battle for the prized seat of Curtin, with millions of dollars being poured into campaigning across Perth's most affluent coastal suburbs.
Climate 200 has tipped more than $200,000 into Curtin in less than a month as the daughter of Perth business icon Michael Chaney fights to hold on to the once-safe Liberal seat she turned teal at the last election.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

Sky News AU
12 hours ago
- Sky News AU
‘Stump up and be a man': Pesutto slammed for asking party donors to ‘bail' him out on lawsuit
Former Queensland premier Campbell Newman says former Victorian Opposition leader John Pesutto needs to 'stump up' and 'be a man' in paying back Victorian Liberal MP Moira Deeming. 'I think she was treated terribly by Pesutto,' Mr Newman told Sky News host Steve Price. 'I think that Pesutto shouldn't be being protected by Jeff Kennett and other people. 'He has made terrible errors of judgement, he needs to pay the price, and if the price of that's to go bankrupt, so be it. 'You shouldn't be tapping party donors to try and bail a guy out. 'He needs to pay his bills.'


Perth Now
12 hours ago
- Perth Now
Labor pledges greater oversight of state infrastructure
Senior Tasmanian bureaucrats will be sacked and stripped of bonuses if major infrastructure projects are not delivered on time and on budget under a Labor government. The pledge from Tasmania's opposition comes as the party seeks to tap into frustrations over delays plaguing major projects ahead of a snap state election in July. "We need to make sure these people understand exactly what their job is and that's to deliver for Tasmanians," Opposition Leader Dean Winter told reporters in Devonport on Saturday. Labor pledged to "boost up" Infrastructure Tasmania and reallocate about $1 million to create a team dedicated to overseeing projects worth more than $100 million. That would include Spirit of Tasmania upgrades, as the price of a yet-to-be-built Devonport facility blows out from $90 million to $495 million. "If we can get these projects right from the start, then we don't see these huge stuff-ups that cost Tasmanians hundreds of millions of dollars and cost our economy even more," Mr Winter said. Tasmanian Liberal Premier Jeremy Rockliff kicked off the first weekend of his campaign at a pharmacy in Riverside, outside Launceston, promising his re-elected government would extend the number of conditions pharmacists could provide treatments for without prescriptions. Some 23 conditions would be added, including ear infections and eczema, with the government in talks with pharmacists about extending operating hours and opening on weekends. The July 19 election was called in the days after Mr Rockliff refused to resign following a no-confidence motion in parliament. That was passed in part due to former Jacqui Lambie Network MP Andrew Jenner, who revealed on Saturday he has switched to the Nationals. "Seventy to 80 per cent of my area, which is the division of Lyons, is rural and regional and I don't think there's a party positioned to represent it better than the Nationals," Mr Jenner said at a press conference alongside Nationals senator Bridget McKenzie. With the premier twice governing in minority, the Labor and Liberal parties are pushing for an outright win at the July 19 poll. Other parties have made no secret of crossbench ambitions, with the Greens vowing not to cut the public service if they win the balance of power. "It's not just the people that we see publicly out in front that are essential - it is everybody behind the scenes that is doing the admin, doing the paperwork and ensuring the public service functions properly," Greens MP Tabatha Badger said.

Sky News AU
a day ago
- Sky News AU
‘Ultimately meaningless': Penny Wong urges diplomacy between Israel and Iran
Liberal Senator Dave Sharma slams Foreign Affairs Minister Penny Wong's diplomatic rhetoric between Israel and Iran as 'ultimately meaningless'. 'It's just sort of common diplomatic speak, but it's ultimately meaningless,' Mr Sharma told Sky News Senior Reporter Caroline Marcus. 'Urging dialogue between Israel and Iran all sounds very well, but those two countries have not spoken directly for 46 years. 'They don't have diplomatic relations; Iran is committed to Israel's destruction, ideologically and politically.'