Townsville Bulletin

I braced for a call from PMO telling me to step aside

MP reveals inside story of ‘absurd misogyny storm’ over preselecti­on

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Winning the preselecti­on in May 2018 for the federal seat of Ryan cast me into a frenzied media storm I had not anticipate­d or prepared for.

Journalist­s from all over the country were using it as an example of the LNP’S misogyny, prime minister Malcolm Turnbull’s weak leadership, a takeover by ultra conservati­ve forces and evidence of our pre-election self-destructio­n.

These were absurdly dly false narratives written by people who had never set foot ot in the electorate, let alone attended ttended the preselecti­on vote.

After I won the preselecti­on eselection ballot, the media tried d to revise history as if it was a personal ersonal vendetta against the sitting federal member, Jane e

Prentice (right).

Having worked with th Prentice in council and succeeding her as councillor, nothing not could have been further furt from the truth. I was close clos to Prentice and had enormous eno respect for her achievemen­ts. ach

I had hoped she would stick to her h earlier indication­s to retire, reti but when she didn’t, I didn’t didn consider a deal had been broken. bro

I wasn’t so naive to think Prentice Pre wouldn’t take it personally. per I couldn’t control that, that but I could control my own actions as I put myself forward. forw

I took with gusto to convincing local LNP members what we could achieve together. I wanted our local community to play a more vocal role in the national debate.

I wanted us to approach the upcoming federal election, which was looking increasing­ly dire, with a spirited grassroots campaign that I knew I had the energy to lead.

I was younger than most people who seek federal parliament, so I proactivel­y pointed out that I had the experience where it counted – on campaigns, as an elected representa­tive and as a member of a cabinet.

Ultimately I simply urged party members to do what they always did – take their responsibi­lity seriously and choose the best candidate on merit.

I won the nomination 256 votes to 103. As far as the national media was concerned, despite the overwhelmi­ng result, it must have been a simple case of gender bias. Why else would party members in the room, of whom 47 per cent were women, have voted for me other than because I was a man! It was so ludicrous that I honestly didn’t see it coming, but it dominated national debate for a week. Commentato­rs called on Turnbull to step in and save Prentice as the candidate.

For a few days after the vote, I braced for the call I thought would come from the

Prime Minister’s Office. The one where they implore you, in the interests of the party, to step aside.

To Turnbull’s credit, my concerns were unfounded.

The nature of democracy is that your preferred candidate doesn’t always win, but this didn’t seem to dawn on most of the media commentato­rs with a gender barrow to push.

Just because you don’t like the outcome of a democratic vote, however, it doesn’t make it any less valid or virtuous.

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 ??  ?? Julian Simmonds, wife Madeline and children Theodore and Isabelle. Picture: Richard Walker
Julian Simmonds, wife Madeline and children Theodore and Isabelle. Picture: Richard Walker

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