logo
What ‘morons' mentioned the Q word? They'd be the smart Libs trying to save their party

What ‘morons' mentioned the Q word? They'd be the smart Libs trying to save their party

The Age09-07-2025
There is no single word more certain to create a deep schism within the Liberals than quotas. And there is nothing more likely to aggravate many in the party than a petition calling for quotas. So it follows that some party members, such as former federal vice-president and Sky After Dark regular Teena McQueen, had conniptions when such a petition was launched.
According to three Liberal women, it was McQueen who once joked that she 'would kill to be sexually harassed' as the party reckoned with its treatment of women. Last week, McQueen posed this question in relation to the quotas petition: 'What absolute moron is behind this?'
Those 'morons' – plural – would be NSW Liberal Women's Council president Berenice Walker, vice president Adelaide Cuneo, former NSW minister Rob Stokes and his wife, Sophie, and Charlotte Mortlock, executive director of Hilma's Network, which was established to boost female representation in the Liberals.
To date, some 500-plus people have signed the petition, which pleads: 'If we do all want more women in parliament, then we must stop the preoccupation with theory, rhetoric and excuses, and accelerate this historic change.' Notably, one of the signatories is Manly MP James Griffin. He is the only senior NSW frontbencher to publicly put his name to the quotas push.
It was a bold move for Griffin. Only a fortnight earlier, NSW Opposition Leader Mark Speakman made his position clear. 'I don't think we need quotas at the moment in the Liberal Party,' he told the Herald in an interview before his budget reply speech. Speakman noted that his state parliamentary party was close to reaching gender parity.
Loading
That is worth celebrating, sure. And it's a damn sight better than the federal Liberal position: just six of the 43 Liberal MPs to sit in the House of Representatives will be women. It must be noted, however, that the improved representation of women in the NSW parliament was achieved because former premier Dominic Perrottet intervened ahead of the last state election to stop the party running an all-male upper house ticket. Perrottet prevailed, and three male MPs were sacrificed to guarantee equal gender representation on the ticket.
(Perrottet did not, however, manage to win the fight over the northern beaches seat of Pittwater. He wanted a woman to run, but the party insisted on Rory Amon. Amon is now facing child sexual assault charges, which he denies, and the seat is in teal hands, won by Jacqui Scruby in a byelection.)
The decision of Griffin, widely viewed as the most likely leadership rival to Speakman, to sign the petition creates an obvious divide between him and his leader. Griffin's take is: 'Quotas are not a compromise on merit; they're a practical response to a system that needs improvement.'
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Dear Leader Jacinta Allan will fight for your right to do what you're already doing
Dear Leader Jacinta Allan will fight for your right to do what you're already doing

Sydney Morning Herald

time4 hours ago

  • Sydney Morning Herald

Dear Leader Jacinta Allan will fight for your right to do what you're already doing

Greetings comrades. Having spent my weekend at the Victorian State Labor Conference, I feel suitably re-educated to talk to you about something peculiar going on within our great and glorious movement. Comrades, has it ever struck you as passingly strange that, for all the things we could be doing in a state where we have been in government 21 of the past 25 years, we spend an awful lot of time talking about the Liberal Party? I say this as a registered observer at the conference, rather than a member of our great and glorious movement, so you will forgive me for not recognising the real and present danger the Liberals represent – with their 20 members in an 88-seat Legislative Assembly – to the rights and lives of working people. But from my cordoned-off position at the back of the room, where delegates are free to approach the journalists as long as they don't feed them, the constant references to what the Liberals did in the 1990s or didn't do in the single term they governed this century seemed a little over-egged. This is what our Dear Leader, Jacinta Allan, told us in her speech: 'Never forget, the Tories have already had their turn and they didn't just sit on their hands – they swung the axe. They shut TAFE campuses (Shame!) and locked young people out. They closed hospitals (Shame!) and made families travel longer. They cut schools and then asked why kids were falling behind. They sold off the SEC (Shame!) and my dad lost his job. Loading 'Deep down, they don't believe working people deserve better.' They sound awful. I'm glad the SEC is back in business, enshrined in the Constitution and, no doubt, employing all those workers again. The Latrobe Valley must be rocking these days. But when you say the Tories have had their turn, are we still talking about 1993? Another thing, comrades. All this stuff about bosses darkly plotting against the interests of the workers they employ – does anyone really believe it?

Dear Leader Jacinta Allan will fight for your right to do what you're already doing
Dear Leader Jacinta Allan will fight for your right to do what you're already doing

The Age

time4 hours ago

  • The Age

Dear Leader Jacinta Allan will fight for your right to do what you're already doing

Greetings comrades. Having spent my weekend at the Victorian State Labor Conference, I feel suitably re-educated to talk to you about something peculiar going on within our great and glorious movement. Comrades, has it ever struck you as passingly strange that, for all the things we could be doing in a state where we have been in government 21 of the past 25 years, we spend an awful lot of time talking about the Liberal Party? I say this as a registered observer at the conference, rather than a member of our great and glorious movement, so you will forgive me for not recognising the real and present danger the Liberals represent – with their 20 members in an 88-seat Legislative Assembly – to the rights and lives of working people. But from my cordoned-off position at the back of the room, where delegates are free to approach the journalists as long as they don't feed them, the constant references to what the Liberals did in the 1990s or didn't do in the single term they governed this century seemed a little over-egged. This is what our Dear Leader, Jacinta Allan, told us in her speech: 'Never forget, the Tories have already had their turn and they didn't just sit on their hands – they swung the axe. They shut TAFE campuses (Shame!) and locked young people out. They closed hospitals (Shame!) and made families travel longer. They cut schools and then asked why kids were falling behind. They sold off the SEC (Shame!) and my dad lost his job. Loading 'Deep down, they don't believe working people deserve better.' They sound awful. I'm glad the SEC is back in business, enshrined in the Constitution and, no doubt, employing all those workers again. The Latrobe Valley must be rocking these days. But when you say the Tories have had their turn, are we still talking about 1993? Another thing, comrades. All this stuff about bosses darkly plotting against the interests of the workers they employ – does anyone really believe it?

'It's 50-50': Libs' fate in balance as showdown looms
'It's 50-50': Libs' fate in balance as showdown looms

The Advertiser

time4 hours ago

  • The Advertiser

'It's 50-50': Libs' fate in balance as showdown looms

A second parliamentary showdown will decide who rules the roost in Tasmania after months mired in chaos. Governor Barbara Baker reappointed Jeremy Rockliff as Tasmanian premier in minority government on Wednesday after weeks of political limbo following a snap election. The election was triggered by Mr Rockliff losing a no-confidence vote in early June, with neither his Liberals (14 seats) nor Labor (10) winning the 18 seats required to control the lower house on their own. Mr Rockliff has no formal agreements of support with the 11 elected minor party MPs and independents, but the governor said the incumbent had the right to remain in office to test the numbers. Labor leader Dean Winter seized the initiative, declaring a motion of no-confidence in the Liberals and confidence in Labor would be moved when state parliament resumes on August 19. Any motion moved would not result in another election but confirm a Liberal or Labor government, he said. Mr Winter has staunchly maintained he won't do a deal with the Greens but said he would meet with all independent crossbenchers on Thursday to explain "the way we think this parliament should work". "Whether they're Liberals, Greens, independents we need to speak with every member," he told reporters. Brad Stansfield, who worked on the Liberals' four election victories before the July 19 poll, said the motion would provide a measure of certainty. "If the motion is successful obviously we'll have a Labor-Greens government," the veteran political campaigner and FontCast host told AAP. "And if the motion is unsuccessful, well we'd like to think that we won't be having any talk of a change of Liberal government for at least a period of time. "People are well and truly over the uncertainty." Independent Craig Garland and the Greens have ruled out supporting a Liberal government. Mr Stansfield said it was unlikely David O'Byrne and fellow independent George Razay would support the motion, based on their previous comments. In that scenario, Labor would need the support of two of the three remaining crossbenchers - independents Kristie Johnston and Peter George and Shooters, Fishers, Farmers MP Carlo Di Falco - to take control. "It's genuinely in the balance," Mr Stansfield said. He said there was a "50-50 chance" Labor formed minority government. "Which is pretty extraordinary given the election result." Election analyst Kevin Bonham compared the situation to Liberal premier Robin Gray losing a no-confidence vote after the 1989 Tasmanian election led to a hung parliament. Dr Bonham said the motion did not appear to set up a pathway for another election, which would be Tasmania's fourth in seven years, but it would not necessarily settle things for the entire four-year term. "It is possible that crossbenchers initially vote against this motion because they're still negotiating," the psephologist told AAP. "So you could get a situation where the government does not fall immediately but falls in three months' time." Mr Rockliff and his cabinet will be sworn in early next week. A second parliamentary showdown will decide who rules the roost in Tasmania after months mired in chaos. Governor Barbara Baker reappointed Jeremy Rockliff as Tasmanian premier in minority government on Wednesday after weeks of political limbo following a snap election. The election was triggered by Mr Rockliff losing a no-confidence vote in early June, with neither his Liberals (14 seats) nor Labor (10) winning the 18 seats required to control the lower house on their own. Mr Rockliff has no formal agreements of support with the 11 elected minor party MPs and independents, but the governor said the incumbent had the right to remain in office to test the numbers. Labor leader Dean Winter seized the initiative, declaring a motion of no-confidence in the Liberals and confidence in Labor would be moved when state parliament resumes on August 19. Any motion moved would not result in another election but confirm a Liberal or Labor government, he said. Mr Winter has staunchly maintained he won't do a deal with the Greens but said he would meet with all independent crossbenchers on Thursday to explain "the way we think this parliament should work". "Whether they're Liberals, Greens, independents we need to speak with every member," he told reporters. Brad Stansfield, who worked on the Liberals' four election victories before the July 19 poll, said the motion would provide a measure of certainty. "If the motion is successful obviously we'll have a Labor-Greens government," the veteran political campaigner and FontCast host told AAP. "And if the motion is unsuccessful, well we'd like to think that we won't be having any talk of a change of Liberal government for at least a period of time. "People are well and truly over the uncertainty." Independent Craig Garland and the Greens have ruled out supporting a Liberal government. Mr Stansfield said it was unlikely David O'Byrne and fellow independent George Razay would support the motion, based on their previous comments. In that scenario, Labor would need the support of two of the three remaining crossbenchers - independents Kristie Johnston and Peter George and Shooters, Fishers, Farmers MP Carlo Di Falco - to take control. "It's genuinely in the balance," Mr Stansfield said. He said there was a "50-50 chance" Labor formed minority government. "Which is pretty extraordinary given the election result." Election analyst Kevin Bonham compared the situation to Liberal premier Robin Gray losing a no-confidence vote after the 1989 Tasmanian election led to a hung parliament. Dr Bonham said the motion did not appear to set up a pathway for another election, which would be Tasmania's fourth in seven years, but it would not necessarily settle things for the entire four-year term. "It is possible that crossbenchers initially vote against this motion because they're still negotiating," the psephologist told AAP. "So you could get a situation where the government does not fall immediately but falls in three months' time." Mr Rockliff and his cabinet will be sworn in early next week. A second parliamentary showdown will decide who rules the roost in Tasmania after months mired in chaos. Governor Barbara Baker reappointed Jeremy Rockliff as Tasmanian premier in minority government on Wednesday after weeks of political limbo following a snap election. The election was triggered by Mr Rockliff losing a no-confidence vote in early June, with neither his Liberals (14 seats) nor Labor (10) winning the 18 seats required to control the lower house on their own. Mr Rockliff has no formal agreements of support with the 11 elected minor party MPs and independents, but the governor said the incumbent had the right to remain in office to test the numbers. Labor leader Dean Winter seized the initiative, declaring a motion of no-confidence in the Liberals and confidence in Labor would be moved when state parliament resumes on August 19. Any motion moved would not result in another election but confirm a Liberal or Labor government, he said. Mr Winter has staunchly maintained he won't do a deal with the Greens but said he would meet with all independent crossbenchers on Thursday to explain "the way we think this parliament should work". "Whether they're Liberals, Greens, independents we need to speak with every member," he told reporters. Brad Stansfield, who worked on the Liberals' four election victories before the July 19 poll, said the motion would provide a measure of certainty. "If the motion is successful obviously we'll have a Labor-Greens government," the veteran political campaigner and FontCast host told AAP. "And if the motion is unsuccessful, well we'd like to think that we won't be having any talk of a change of Liberal government for at least a period of time. "People are well and truly over the uncertainty." Independent Craig Garland and the Greens have ruled out supporting a Liberal government. Mr Stansfield said it was unlikely David O'Byrne and fellow independent George Razay would support the motion, based on their previous comments. In that scenario, Labor would need the support of two of the three remaining crossbenchers - independents Kristie Johnston and Peter George and Shooters, Fishers, Farmers MP Carlo Di Falco - to take control. "It's genuinely in the balance," Mr Stansfield said. He said there was a "50-50 chance" Labor formed minority government. "Which is pretty extraordinary given the election result." Election analyst Kevin Bonham compared the situation to Liberal premier Robin Gray losing a no-confidence vote after the 1989 Tasmanian election led to a hung parliament. Dr Bonham said the motion did not appear to set up a pathway for another election, which would be Tasmania's fourth in seven years, but it would not necessarily settle things for the entire four-year term. "It is possible that crossbenchers initially vote against this motion because they're still negotiating," the psephologist told AAP. "So you could get a situation where the government does not fall immediately but falls in three months' time." Mr Rockliff and his cabinet will be sworn in early next week. A second parliamentary showdown will decide who rules the roost in Tasmania after months mired in chaos. Governor Barbara Baker reappointed Jeremy Rockliff as Tasmanian premier in minority government on Wednesday after weeks of political limbo following a snap election. The election was triggered by Mr Rockliff losing a no-confidence vote in early June, with neither his Liberals (14 seats) nor Labor (10) winning the 18 seats required to control the lower house on their own. Mr Rockliff has no formal agreements of support with the 11 elected minor party MPs and independents, but the governor said the incumbent had the right to remain in office to test the numbers. Labor leader Dean Winter seized the initiative, declaring a motion of no-confidence in the Liberals and confidence in Labor would be moved when state parliament resumes on August 19. Any motion moved would not result in another election but confirm a Liberal or Labor government, he said. Mr Winter has staunchly maintained he won't do a deal with the Greens but said he would meet with all independent crossbenchers on Thursday to explain "the way we think this parliament should work". "Whether they're Liberals, Greens, independents we need to speak with every member," he told reporters. Brad Stansfield, who worked on the Liberals' four election victories before the July 19 poll, said the motion would provide a measure of certainty. "If the motion is successful obviously we'll have a Labor-Greens government," the veteran political campaigner and FontCast host told AAP. "And if the motion is unsuccessful, well we'd like to think that we won't be having any talk of a change of Liberal government for at least a period of time. "People are well and truly over the uncertainty." Independent Craig Garland and the Greens have ruled out supporting a Liberal government. Mr Stansfield said it was unlikely David O'Byrne and fellow independent George Razay would support the motion, based on their previous comments. In that scenario, Labor would need the support of two of the three remaining crossbenchers - independents Kristie Johnston and Peter George and Shooters, Fishers, Farmers MP Carlo Di Falco - to take control. "It's genuinely in the balance," Mr Stansfield said. He said there was a "50-50 chance" Labor formed minority government. "Which is pretty extraordinary given the election result." Election analyst Kevin Bonham compared the situation to Liberal premier Robin Gray losing a no-confidence vote after the 1989 Tasmanian election led to a hung parliament. Dr Bonham said the motion did not appear to set up a pathway for another election, which would be Tasmania's fourth in seven years, but it would not necessarily settle things for the entire four-year term. "It is possible that crossbenchers initially vote against this motion because they're still negotiating," the psephologist told AAP. "So you could get a situation where the government does not fall immediately but falls in three months' time." Mr Rockliff and his cabinet will be sworn in early next week.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store