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Wheatbelt's Trey Westlake and Nathan Wayne to highlight rural issues at 30th Y WA's Youth Parliament program

Wheatbelt's Trey Westlake and Nathan Wayne to highlight rural issues at 30th Y WA's Youth Parliament program

West Australian12-05-2025

Two budding politicians from the Wheatbelt will take their fight to Parliament, joining regional youth from across Western Australia for the 30th Y WA's Youth Parliament program.
Newdegate's Trey Westlake and Bruce Rock's Nathan Wayne are two of the 59 parliamentarians aged between 15 and 25-years-old selected to partake in the four-month leadership program.
They will take part in three training days ahead of the July 6-11 residential camp, which will take them to State Parliament where they will debate bills before presenting them to the Governor, Premier, and Leader of the Opposition.
As the Youth Member for Roe for the second consecutive year, Mr Westlake continues to prioritise regional issues, focusing on the agriculture, food and fisheries, and regional and State development government portfolios.
The 16-year-old said his goal was 'to begin change and bring attention' to regional people.
'I originally joined Youth Parliament to gain real-world experience in politics,' Mr Westlake said.
'After participating last year, I came to realise it's more than just an experience it's a genuine opportunity to represent and advocate for my regional people with the audience being real members of parliament.
'While I may not be able to push bills through Parliament myself as I'm not a member, I can raise awareness and give regional youth a stronger voice in Parliament.
'I want to put regional issues on the map and hold decisionmakers to account.'
Debating the live export ban in Parliament last year, Mr Westlake highlighted education, phone reception, power reliability, healthcare and roads as other important regional issues.
As a high school student at Aquinas College, Mr Westlake said it was important to involve young people in politics because their challenges were 'unique' and 'often misunderstood or entirely overlooked'
'It's crucial that we have a seat at the table to highlight these issues and help shape the future that we'll inherit,' he said.
'We have ideas, experiences, and perspectives that are just as valid and valuable as anyone else's.
'That's why we deserve a voice.'
For their first time in the program, Mr Wayne is the youth member for the Central Wheatbelt focusing on protection and sustainability in rural communities against climate change and shifting the negative dialogue between primary consumers and environmentalists.
'Research suggests rural communities and economics will be more negatively impacted by climate change than the metropolitan area,' the 24-year-old said.
'Primary producers and environmentalists actually have a lot in common than social commentary or the media tend to suggest.
'We have so much to gain by working together.'
Part of the LGBTQI+ community, Mr Wayne also hopes to give the 'under represented' group in rural areas a platform.

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