OK, that was… a lot! We will be back tomorrow with continuing live coverage. Here’s a quick breakdown.
The Liberal Party gathered in Canberra to discuss its energy policy today, in a meeting that ended up lasting five hours and at which 49 of the 51 MPs spoke:
- This masthead understands 17 Liberals had spoken in favour of keeping a commitment to net zero by 2050, 28 MPs spoke in favour of dumping support for net zero and the views of four speakers were not clear.
- Following Liberal energy and emissions reductions spokesperson Dan Tehan’s press conference, a list of 10 “energy and emissions reduction principles” were handed out, including a rejection of the governments “unrealistic” emissions reductions targets.
- Liberal leadership aspirant Andrew Hastie said the party should think about forcing a double dissolution election on the net zero target.
- Conservative frontbencher Michaelia Cash urged her colleagues to embrace the push to dump net zero and win the argument over energy in the same way the Coalition successfully helped defeat Labor’s Voice to parliament referendum in 2023.
- Sarah Henderson, the Victorian senator who refused to back Sussan Ley’s leadership, questioned Liberal Party federal director Andrew Hirst’s research showing voters associated the term “net zero” with credible climate action. Henderson also signalled out this masthead while slamming Ley for letting the meeting’s details leak to the press.
- Victorian MP Tim Wilson proposed a new net zero model to win over his colleagues. Wilson argued for a “net zero valve” that would delay the 2050 target if electricity bills rose at a quicker pace than inflation.
- At the end of it all, Dan Tehan, the party’s energy spokesperson, did not disclose exactly how many MPs wanted to keep the commitment to net zero greenhouse emissions by 2050 at a press conference after the meeting.
- He said he needed to work on the policy this evening before it was formally announced tomorrow.
- After this, senior Liberals will meet with Nationals MPs - who dumped net zero earlier this month - to try and flesh out a consistent policy position for the Coalition.
Read more here from our political correspondent James Massola. He writes that net zero is doomed… and so is Ley.