The Weekend Post

DIS-UNITY COULD

‘I didn’t realise you loathe me’: Mayor’s comments at secret meeting reveal Council tensions

- ISAAC MCCARTHY

THE Cairns Regional Council Unity Team is under threat as divisions appear following a secret and tense meeting.

The team has been a dominant majority in the past decade, deciding major decisions on behalf of ratepayers.

But the bonds between leader Bob Manning and his followers are weakening after Cr Manning called a closeddoor meeting in the council’s committee room on November

16.

The date coincided with the debate over the council’s proposed rate hike on nonprincip­al places of residence, otherwise known as the “tenant tax”, including councillor Brett Old’s declaratio­n the day before that he would not support the proposal.

According to at least five councillor­s, Cr Manning called the meeting to lament the lack of cohesivene­ss among the council, and urged teamwork. He also referenced a number of complaints related to him.

According to one councillor, Cr Manning said: “I didn’t realise you all loathe me so much”.

An additional councillor said any complaints being raised between the mayor and councillor­s amounted to little more than personalit­y clashes.

Cr Manning confirmed the topic of OIA complaints was discussed but denied there were any accusation­s.

“What was discussed in that meeting is confidenti­al,” Cr Manning said.

“If you want to run rumours out there, it will not be in the best interests of council; therefore, it will not be in the best interests of the people of Cairns.”

Cr Manning said the meeting was a “frank discussion”.

But several councillor­s have questioned the longevity of the Unity Team, mirroring council CEO Mica Martin’s comments in December the team could eventually disband.

One councillor said the team was “Unity in name only”. A second described it as a burden to be avoided. A third said confidence between the mayor and councillor­s had diminished and a fourth said the Unity ticket would struggle at the next election without recruiting strong candidates.

The fallout from N-PPR also signalled new voting lines on key issues. Rather than seven Unity members voting in a block and at least one of the three independen­ts, as some label them, dissenting, three factions are fading into view.

Team Bob includes councillor­s Brett Moller, Kristy Vallely and Rhonda Coghlan. The dissenters include councillor­s Amy Eden, Brett Olds and Cathy Zeiger. The pendulum group includes councillor­s Max O’Halloran, Rob Pyne and Terry James.

Cr Manning agreed with

the assessment of the factions but downplayed the significan­ce of the Unity Team as an entity with broader clout.

“The little groupings … that’s my read of it too,” Cr Manning said.

“I think a council can be constructe­d on those lines, and that wouldn’t be a bad thing. You will never have a council where everyone is in the same faction.

“There is no entity called Unity … you can’t disband it because Unity is not an entity.

“It’s a group of like-minded people … you could call that group whatever you like.

“We used to be more likeminded.”

But Unity affiliatio­n has been a common denominato­r of past success. Three councillor­s – Cr Eden, Cr Coghlan and Cr Vallely – were successful in their 2020 electoral campaigns as part of Unity, as were Cr O’Halloran in 2012 and Cr Moller in 2016.

Cr Coghlan was previously unsuccessf­ul in her 2012 bid when not affiliated.

After an unsuccessf­ul electoral campaign in 2008 when not affiliated with Unity, former councillor Richie Bates found success with Unity in 2012 and 2016, but lost as an independen­t in 2020 to his Unity replacemen­t Cr Eden.

Unity will lose its leader in 2024 when Cr Manning steps down, and Cr O’Halloran who is seeing out his third term.

With a Unity mayoral candidate not yet clear — Cr

James has declared he intents to put his hand up but Cr Moller has not — the team’s future leadership is uncertain.

Then there’s Cr Eden, who was the first, and only, Unity member to denounce the NPPR proposal. She has also hinted at her own mayoral ambitions.

With two confirmed, and a potential four, departures from Unity, the group’s leverage could be significan­tly lessened heading into the 2024 election.

 ?? ?? CR TERRY JAMES
CR BOB MANNING
CR TERRY JAMES CR BOB MANNING
 ?? ?? FORMER CR JOHN SCHILLING
FORMER CR JOHN SCHILLING

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