Shepparton News

Birrell feeling good about Nationals’ campaign

- By Darren Linton

Nationals candidate Sam Birrell is feeling good about his campaign but knows it will be a long week ahead as more and more voters make up their mind.

After a week coming face to face with voters at pre-poll he’s buoyant but still campaignin­g hard.

“It has been very positive, the community reaction to me has been positive,” he said.

“They (voters) are positive about what the Nationals have achieved and positive about me as a candidate.”

While many of the issues he entered the campaign fighting on such as water, services and infrastruc­ture remain central to the campaign, cost of living has emerged as a big issue for voters.

“The cost of living concern is something that has happened since the campaign started, it wasn’t there at the start,” he said.

“There’s been an appreciati­on of what the coalition has done about it and what we are planning to do.”

“I’ve learned if you connect with people, listen and show understand­ing of their issues then that gets a really good response from people.”

Mr Birrell said the tight political contest for the seat of Nicholls had been unfairly framed as the result of an independen­t candidate, but he said the Nationals were always going to fight hard to retain the seat.

“Because the Nationals have delivered a lot there is a heightened expectatio­n, and that is expected, they want me to keep fighting hard for projects,” he said.

Mr Birrell said funding promises for sports stadiums in Shepparton and Yarrawonga, the new Rural Clinical Health School in Shepparton and a wellness hub in Seymour had strengthen­ed his view that delivery was easier as part of a political party.

His campaign has been built around being a “different” kind of National, and he bristles at the notion that honesty and integrity was the sole domain of independen­ts.

“You don’t have to wear an orange shirt to be a paragon of virtue,” he said.

“I’m a community person, I have integrity and honesty and I want to work within a party because I think I can get more things done.

“If the Nationals team comes together to do things that help people’s lives then that helps, it is about delivery and the projects we develop.”

Mr Birrell also argues against the concept that Nicholls needed to be marginal to get better outcomes.

“I don’t see the marginal seat thing being as important as people make out,” he said.

“I see a really good local member as fighting for their community and delivering the message to Canberra — that is more important than being marginal.”

He has a dim view of the treatment of retiring Nationals MP Damian Drum, especially the depiction of Nicholls as having been neglected.

“I think it has been a good campaign, there have been good ideas put forward by candidates and that is a positive thing, but the denigratio­n of Damian Drum’s achievemen­ts and legacy has been disappoint­ing to me personally, but that is politics,” he said.

“I don’t believe the people of Nicholls buy that.”

Mr Birrell acknowledg­es the prospect of entering parliament in opposition, but it isn’t something he’s contemplat­ing.

“I am working extremely hard to make sure it doesn’t happen because that would be a disaster for the region, and a disaster for the nation,” he said.

“I’ll be standing on prepoll a lot over the next week talking to voters.”

 ?? ?? Team: Nationals Senator Bridget McKenzie and Sam Birrell.
Team: Nationals Senator Bridget McKenzie and Sam Birrell.
 ?? ?? Getting out and about: Sam Birrell in Seymour.
Getting out and about: Sam Birrell in Seymour.

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