The Sydney Morning Herald logo
Advertisement

This was published 11 months ago

Victoria’s hot seats week three as it happened: Adam Bandt DJs like nobody is watching (but everyone is); How much will Gaza conflict matter in Wills?

Charlotte Grieve, Rachael Dexter, Clay Lucas and Cara Waters
Updated ,first published

Move over, DJ Albo: Adam Bandt revs up the crowd at this cult Melbourne club

By Cassidy Knowlton

Just when we thought Hot Seats had wrapped for the week, here’s a bonus Easter egg for our devoted readers.

Good Friday party people at legendary Melbourne club Revolver were in for a surprise when regular Friday night DJ Mike Callander was joined in ‘the cage’ by an upstart on the decks: Australian Greens leader Adam Bandt.

Bandt, whose Melbourne electorate now takes in “Revs” – as the nightclub on Chapel Street in Prahran is fondly known – played for about 90 minutes into the early hours of Saturday morning, wearing a white T-shirt, and a white cap emblazoned with the words “vote”.

Punters were shocked – and delighted – to find he had both excellent taste in music and the skills to get everyone dancing.

That’s the end of week three

By

That’s it for the third week of our Hot Seats blog.

It’s been eventful to say the least. We really hope you’re enjoying it.

The Age’s editor, Patrick Elligett, wrote about how we’re doing the blog and where it fits into our wider election coverage in his weekly letter to subscribers.

We’ll be back on Monday with plenty more news and insights into these key electorates.

How much will Gaza conflict matter in Wills?

By

As I’ve moved through the Wills electorate over the past three weeks, one of the hardest things to gauge is how the war in Gaza will shape the result at the ballot box.

For those deeply engaged in the issue – many of them Greens or minor party voters – Labor’s response is unacceptable to a conflict where more than 60,000 people have been killed in Gaza since Israel launched its invasion in response to the Hamas attacks in late 2023 which killed 1300 people. For them the conflict is likely a decisive factor in how they’ll vote.

What’s less clear is how much the broader electorate is paying attention. Labor campaigners insist it’s not an issue that comes up much on the ground.

Former MP for Wills Phil Cleary says he’s very disappointed in Labor’s stance on Gaza.Luis Enrique Ascui
Advertisement

‘What’s your nasho?’: Coffee and chai with Casey’s champion of the truth

By

Within a few days of becoming The Age’s Bruce correspondent, I received an email from Amanjit Gill.

She runs the controversial Facebook page City of Casey Transparency Advocate, and has her finger on the pulse of all things local.

Her page has led to legal threats, and she’s been reported to the Local Government Inspectorate as she publishes inconvenient screenshots, public documents and often-accusatory analysis.

She haunts politicians of all levels and stripes, demanding straightforward answers to simple questions. I wanted to know more about the person behind the page, and what drives her.

How Kooyong boundary may help - not hurt - Monique Ryan

By

When the Australian Electoral Commission finalised the redistribution of Kooyong bringing in 26,000 additional voters from Toorak and surrounding areas, chatter immediately turned to what it would mean for teal independent Monique Ryan.

The consensus was swift: the new boundaries, which carved out parts of Kooyong and added in chunks of the now-abolished seat of Higgins, were seen as a win for the Liberal Party — and a problem for Ryan, pushing her hold on the seat from 2.9 per cent to 2.2 per cent.

It even saw a short-lived push for former Treasurer Josh Frydenberg to return and try take the seat back. But election analyst Ben Raue, founder of the blog and podcast The Tally Room, sees things differently.

Port Melbourne? Dandenong? Canberra? Where ‘genuine local’ Julian Hill lives

By

In flyers sent to voters in recent weeks, Hill describes himself as a “genuine local” who “grew up in the south-eastern suburbs”.

There has been a persistent rumour thought that this isn’t the full story. One of the first things I heard when I started covering Bruce for this blog were whispers that Hill lives in the city, and drives to the electorate each day.

Julian Hill and a baby on the campaign trail.Charlotte Grieve

The claim was repeated and twisted by voters I spoke with on the street, and Liberal campaign staffers pushing the message through Zahid Safi’s social media.

Advertisement

‘Hard to be a landlord in Victoria’: Hamer addresses property controversy

By

Liberal candidate for Kooyong Amelia Hamer has publicly addressed the controversy over her property portfolio for the first time, defending her decision to rent in Hawthorn while owning investment properties in London and Canberra.

I broke the story last week that Hamer owns two homes — a detail that had been absent from her campaign messaging to date, which had promoted her as a renter grappling with the same plight as many Millennials unable to break into the property market or delaying having children due to housing difficulties.

Speaking at a funding announcement for Greythorn Park Pavilion in Balwyn North on Wednesday, Hamer did not acknowledge omitting her property ownership from the campaign, but pivoted to discussing the difficulties of being a landlord.

Dutton blasts teals as ‘Greens in disguise’ amid push-polling storm

By

Opposition Leader Peter Dutton has accused teal independents of being “Greens in disguise,” escalating his attacks on the crossbench as controversy brews over push polling in key inner-city seats.

“This fraud has to stop,” Dutton said at a press conference in Mt Dee in NSW on Thursday, claiming many teal supporters were “Greens who have now got a teal T-shirt on”.

“At least the Greens have the honesty to stand up and say, ‘We’re Greens – we’ve got crazy policies, sure, but you should know that going into the election’,” he said.

Loading

‘Not push-polling’: Daniel defends Climate 200 surveys

By

Independent MP Zoe Daniel says she was unaware of the controversial phone polling undertaken by Climate 200 in her electorate and claimed it was not push-polling.

My colleague, Olivia Ireland, reported today that Climate 200 has been using robocalls to spruik teal MPs, including Daniel, and tarnish their opponents under the banner of conducting polling, a practice commonly referred to as “push-polling”.

Fellow teal MP Monique Ryan told the ABC on Thursday morning that push-polling was “not ideal” and that she was not aware of it occurring in her seat. Shortly after that TV appearance, my Hot Seats blog colleague, Rachael Dexter, broke the story that apparent push-polling, focused on the Liberal Party’s nuclear policy, had been conducted in Ryan’s seat of Kooyong.

Daniel, the MP for Goldstein, said the poll in her seat was not commissioned, paid for or put into the field by her campaign.

Advertisement

‘Win Bruce, win the election’: Morrison visit underscores Liberal Party mantra

By

Former prime minister Scott Morrison was filmed at an event with Bruce Liberal candidate Zahid Safi on Wednesday night.

It’s the latest visit from a Liberal heavyweight. John Howard and Opposition Leader Peter Dutton have also been on the hustings with Safi in recent weeks, and dining with volunteers.

The Liberals are throwing resources at the Labor-held seat under the mantra of “win Bruce, win government”, although Safi’s whereabouts have been tightly guarded, even among his own membership base.

Advertisement