Peter Dutton's allies speak out on election loss and polling disaster
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Peter Dutton's Liberal campaign was so shocked by its historic defeat that the party president demanded the federal director explain its fatally flawed polling in the middle of their own election party, while one of Mr Dutton's top allies kept thousands in the bank after the then-opposition leader told him his seat was safe.
As Sussan Ley works over the weekend to patch up a splintered Coalition and find a strategy to deal with a Labor win so large it could guarantee Anthony Albanese two more terms in office, the Liberal Party has finally laid bare the mistakes that led Mr Dutton to lose his own seat and more than a dozen of his colleagues' on May 3.
Defeated Liberal National Party opposition assistant minister Luke Howarth has revealed Mr Dutton reassured him his outer-Brisbane seat of Petrie was safe, before asking for part of his campaign war chest to be spent trying to win a Labor-held longshot seat and defend Coalition strongholds from the threat of Climate 200-backed Teal candidates. Mr Howarth has also conceded he regrets putting his longtime friend Mr Dutton's face on joint billboards and how-to-vote cards, after he underestimated the then leader's unpopularity in their adjoining electorates.
Another senior Liberal source said the internal polling by Freshwater Strategy was 'way out' and had given Mr Dutton's team, strategists and MPs flawed information throughout the campaign.
'The polling was a huge problem … it was way out,' the senior Liberal told The Australian.
'If we'd have known (the truth) we would have changed course overnight.'
The senior Liberal source also criticised the strength of negative ads produced by Coalition campaign headquarters and director Andrew Hirst, and suggested it was not official opposition policy when Senator Jane Hume announced Canberra-based public servants would be forced to work full-time from the office.
Senator Hume's office rejected that claim and said her speech and the policy announcement had been put through the proper channels, including Mr Dutton's office.
Peter Dutton, centre, Angus Taylor, left, and Jane Hume at Parliament House before the election. Picture: Martin Ollman / NewsWire
But the senior Liberal source said rather than kill Senator Hume's announcement straight away and stoke talk there was a policy split, it was decided it was a 'benign' issue.
According to sources who saw the final Freshwater tracking poll conducted on the Wednesday night before the election, the research showed a swing to the Liberals in some NSW and Victorian marginal seats of about 5 per cent.
Emboldened by that result, Mr Dutton told close allies and MPs, including Mr Howarth, that he could win 10 seats off Labor and force Anthony Albanese into minority government.
Liberal Party president John Olsen. Picture: Nikki Davis-Jones
Liberal Party federal director Andrew Hirst. Picture: Kym Smith
Liberal Party president John Olsen confirmed the flawed polling would be a major target of the 'full and transparent' review of the federal campaign.
On election night in the Liberal Party's campaign war room at Brisbane's the W Hotel, when it became obvious the Freshwater polling failed to predict the scale of Labor's victory, Mr Olsen challenged Coalition campaign director Andrew Hirst to explain what had gone wrong.
Mr Olsen denied the confrontation was 'heated' but said 'we certainly had a conversation on polling, you wouldn't have to be Einstein to work that out'.
Mr Howarth said Mr Dutton was let down by his own office, polling, poor policy development and an inability to counter Labor's devastating personal attacks.
Mr Dutton was reassured by Freshwater twice during the campaign that he was ahead in his own seat of Dickson, which he went on to lose after three-time Labor candidate Ali France secured a 7.76 per cent swing to her.
Mr Howarth said he did not poll his own seat of Petrie, partly because Labor had not announced a candidate until the eve of the campaign but mostly because he was reassured he was safe.
He said Mr Dutton told him to help in neighbouring Lilley, held by Labor Sport Minister Anika Wells, so he raised $1.7m and spent $634,000 in his own seat of Petrie, before tipping $350,000 into Lilley and $400,000 into other seats.
Mr Howarth has hundreds of thousands of dollars left in his campaign war chest but said he did not regret helping his colleagues.
Defeated Queensland LNP MP Bert van Manen. Picture: Jerad Williams
'But the whole polling was wrong … I don't think the leader or his office had any idea what was coming – clearly – because they didn't think he'd lose his own seat. They didn't think I'd lose my seat.'
Freshwater Strategy declined to comment and director Mike Turner is legally prevented from talking because he's still under contract with the party.
It is understood the company did not decide which seats to poll, and that the pollster believes its research consistently and increasingly showed that Labor was the favourite to form government.
Another defeated Queensland LNP MP, Bert van Manen, said there was no indication he would lose his seat of Forde, which he held on just over 4 per cent, but the working-from-home policy hurt his chances.
'Certainly I got no indication from anywhere that there were any risks (to my seat),' Mr van Manen said.
'It's an unusual situation for me because in every campaign I'm in the top five or 10 (marginal) seats in the country and nobody was discussing my seat or Luke (Howarth's) seat this time.'
'Not you guys (in the media), not pollsters, not Labor. From that perspective, it was strange that we got the result that we did. We need to have a good hard look at what went wrong.'
Mr van Manen said the Coalition's policy to cancel working from home arrangements for public servants – which was later reversed – and plans to cut 41,000 Canberra bureaucrats hurt him.
'One hundred per cent I had that feedback directly. Women at the polling booths were concerned … and there's a general view in Queensland … that given what happened during Campbell Newman's tenure, that still resonates when you're talking about public servants.'
Mr Newman's LNP government was defeated after just one term in power, following the sacking of about 14,000 state public servants.
Read related topics: Peter Dutton
Sarah Elks
Senior Reporter
Sarah Elks is a senior reporter for The Australian in its Brisbane bureau, focusing on investigations into politics, business and industry. Sarah has worked for the paper for 15 years, primarily in Brisbane, but also in Sydney, and in Cairns as north Queensland correspondent. She has covered election campaigns, high-profile murder trials, and natural disasters, and was named Queensland Journalist of the Year in 2016 for a series of exclusive stories exposing the failure of Clive Palmer's Queensland Nickel business. Sarah has been nominated for four Walkley awards. Got a tip? elkss@theaustralian.com.au; GPO Box 2145 Brisbane QLD 4001
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Sydney Morning Herald
a minute ago
- Sydney Morning Herald
Albanese's Palestine decision achieves nothing but division
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Boris Feigin, Narwee Boomer bashers For the most part, I agree with Alexandra Smith's assessment of Gareth Ward and her acknowledgement of Kate Dezarnaulds' courage in speaking out against a renowned litigator (' Ward a rapist and bully but beloved by Boomers ', August 14). But in an age when bigotry and racism are rightfully called out and condemned, it seems that ageism, generalising and vilifying the Boomer generation gets a free pass. May I remind the Herald that the Boomer generation led the charge for social reform, fought and marched for feminist issues, fought and marched against racism and for equality, and protested against war. Our music was the music of protest and struggle for social change and equality for race and gender. We were inspired and we were active. Maybe that's the real reason for 'Boomer bashing'. It was a generation not only of hope, but of action for a better and fairer world. Alph Williams, Red Rock Climate change reality It is not difficult to picture the alleged confrontation centred around Wamberal beachfront erosion (' Police probe as beachfront erosion battle turns violent ', August 14). Homeowners, threatened by the inexorable consequences of global warming will, understandably, take measures in a most probably futile attempt to protect their properties. Beach users, seeing the seashore inevitably transitioning from sandy stretches to walls of concrete and rubble, will also be distressed. The accelerating rise in sea levels is an existential threat, not just to Pacific and Torres Strait islanders, but also to vast swathes of the Australian coastline. Unfortunately, governments at all levels can neither permit landowners the freedom to fortify their properties at the expense of their neighbours, nor can they, in view of vast anticipated future infrastructure costs, start contributing any significant funding to preserve private real estate. 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Warren Bowden, Fairlight Falafel politics In the interests of neutrality and harmony it was reasonable for the Merivale establishment to ask customers to remove the keffiyeh (' Falafel eatery turned away diners wearing keffiyehs ', August 14) – provided they also asked customers to remove the kippah. Where will it end? Perhaps those wearing jewellery such as a cross pendant (crucifix) will be next. Janet Cook, Waverton Bad taste Memo to Hugh Marks, who cites Masterchef as his inspiration (' New ABC boss wants global hits from the broadcaster ', August 14). The 'premium' aspect of hopeful amateurs being browbeaten by self-centred prigs is cash. The ABC is a public broadcaster. Making money from broadcasting the anguish of brokenhearted aspirants is not your brief. Quality entertainment, without a mean streak, is. 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ABC News
a minute ago
- ABC News
Queensland chief health officer appointment scrapped for second time
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ABC News
an hour ago
- ABC News
WA gun owners protest regulations as police minister warns of 'total firearm anarchy'
Frustrated WA gun owners have gathered in droves at Parliament House to support a crossbencher's motion to scrap controversial firearms regulations, but opposition from the Greens means it will not pass parliament. Legalise Cannabis MLC Brian Walker tried to use a disallowance motion to force the government to abandon the new laws, which came into effect in March and have been billed "the strictest in the country". But despite more than 1,000 people rallying outside Parliament this morning, the motion faces certain defeat since it has failed to win crucial support from the Greens, with leader Brad Pettitt saying the party could not support "the nuclear option" of scrapping it altogether. The regulations faced a backlash from gun owners and the WA Nationals, who have thrown their support behind the motion, as well as One Nation MLCs. The changes were meant to make it harder to get licences, including by requiring stronger evidence of why firearms are needed. 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We'll be working with the government to make sure it improves the current regulations, not blow the whole lot up." Given the Greens confirmed they won't support the motion, it won't have enough support to get up even with Opposition and some crossbench support. Opposition Leader Basil Zempilas, who previously supported the motion in the lower house, did not make himself available for reporters on the way into parliament this morning about his stance on the issue. The government said the laws are designed to keep the community safe by keeping guns out of the hands of violent offenders. The rally comes after police and consumer authorities on Wednesday warned videos circulating on social media featuring deep fake AI generated police officers condemning the firearm law reforms could lead to community unrest. One video features the AI generated officers removing a gun from a crying elderly farmer, while the other shows an officer falsely stating defence personnel can't hold firearms "unless they can prove they're not crazy". Consumer Protection commissioner Trish Blake said the videos were "intended to build heat and passion in the community". "But it's on based on lies, so and that's where we're worried that someone might be misguided into doing something dumb, responding or actioning something in any way that causes them harm or harm to the community," she said. "It is really concerning because it is misinformation that is causing a lot of heated debate in the community unnecessarily and we really don't want people to be misinformed and we don't want people to be encouraged to take action or do something really dumb based on this."