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‘It’s not easy being a socialist’: Door-knocking with Richmond candidate Roz Ward

Bianca Hall

Victorian Socialists are wearing out their boot leather ahead of Saturday’s state poll.

The micro-party’s volunteers have knocked on more than 10,000 doors in the inner-suburban seat of Richmond, and some 180,000 doors across the Northern Metropolitan and Western Metropolitan regions.

Roz Ward, the Victorian Socialists candidate for Richmond.Joe Armao

If the party’s internal assessment is right, those two regions will be key battlegrounds between the left and conservatives.

After calculating the intricate group voting tickets preference flows, Richmond candidate Roz Ward predicts the last seat in Northern Metropolitan will most likely be fought between Victorian Socialist Jerome Small and former Labor MP Adem Somyurek (Reason leader Fiona Patten disputes this, saying “everyone else except for the socialists” believe the contest will be between herself and Somyurek).

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The last seat in Western Metropolitan will be fought between Victorian Socialist Liz Walsh and former Liberal MP Bernie Finn, Ward says.

“So it’s pretty much full left versus right and that would really make a difference, I think, in terms of what parliament looks like next time around”.

The inner-suburban lower house seat of Richmond, held by Labor’s Richard Wynne on a nominal margin of 5.8 per cent after redistribution, is Victorian Socialists heartland. Wynne is retiring from the seat he has held for 23 years.

In 2014, then-Victorian Socialists candidate and Yarra councillor Stephen Jolly attracted 8.5 per cent of primary votes in Richmond. Even with no lower house candidate in 2018, the party polled about 7 per cent support in Richmond booths for Jolly’s tilt at the upper house.

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With Jolly out of the party, Ward – best known for introducing the anti-bullying Safe Schools program – is lead candidate.

Labor has preselected Lauren O’Dwyer, associate director of First Nations foundations at the Arts Centre, and a former staffer to retiring MP Martin Foley.

Labor and the Democratic Labour Party have held Richmond for more than a century, but an increased Greens vote, and the decision by the Liberals to preference the Greens over Labor, are raising the likelihood Richmond will go to the Greens for the first time.

The Victorian Socialists have also directed preferences to the Greens above Labor, meaning their vote could be a deciding factor in the hotly contested seat.

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Party members on door-knocking duty are equipped with an app called Knockify on their mobile phones. As several volunteers fan out across Fitzroy’s backstreets, Ward demonstrates how it works.

First, she taps on a map of the streets surrounding where we are. The map shows every building and reveals the number of enrolled voters inside each home, using information held by the Victorian electoral roll.

The Victorian Socialists have knocked on more than 10,000 doors in Richmond.Joe Armao

Volunteers can update the app with information about whether the voters who answer their doors are amenable to the Socialists’ message, or hostile. If voters are amenable, volunteers record whether they agree to display a corflute on their home or garden, or to volunteer with the party.

In this way, Ward says, the party has signed up more than 1000 volunteers to work on polling day on Saturday, while other parties struggle to garner enough volunteers for every booth.

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Ward argues Socialists are uniquely placed to cut through to undecided voters by virtue of their experience as activists, despite Richmond having the highest median personal income in the state.

“We’ve got lots of people who’ve done campaigning on so many different issues, trying to stop people in the streets for years, about whatever it is,” she says.“You have to have some of those skills to be a socialist. Because what the system tells you is, it’s impossible [to make societal change], and it’s not worth trying, it’s not worth fighting.

“Like, it’s not supposed to be easy to be a socialist in this society, [and] for us to do well. So you need people who go beyond the social expectations. You need people who are not afraid of who’s going to open the door and ask real questions, and you need people who are prepared to try to answer questions also.”

This story is part of our in-depth local coverage of the key seats of Melton, Hawthorn and Richmond at the November state election.

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Bianca HallBianca Hall is The Age's environment and climate reporter, and has worked in a range of roles including as a senior writer, city editor, and in the federal politics bureau in Canberra.Connect via X, Facebook or email.

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