Weekend Gold Coast Bulletin

RIGHTING THE SHIP

LNP MUTINY JUST THE START – BARNACLES MUST GO

- PETER GLEESON

WHEN LNP parliament­ary leader David Crisafulli strode to the podium at the state council conference six weeks ago, he was uncharacte­ristically nervous.

This was a defining moment in his leadership and the ultimate prize, to be the next premier of Queensland.

Seated just a few feet away was the acting LNP president Cynthia Hardy and the Godfather of the conservati­ve movement in Queensland, former president Bruce McIver.

After being elected in the wake of the devastatin­g election loss six months earlier, Crisafulli had spent months travelling the state, talking to branch members about how the LNP was going to dust itself off after the defeat.

The mood he had detected was one of anger, like he’d never experience­d before.

The grassroots members were livid that the organisati­on they loved, the party they believed in, was selfharmin­g. They had watched the LNP organisati­on and its executive preside over a dysfunctio­nality that made the Trump administra­tion look like seasoned profession­als.

For many, there were two key “final straws”.

The first was the transparen­tly stupid leaking of internal polling six months out from the election showing that then leader Deb Frecklingt­on would struggle to win the October 31, 2020 poll.

If it was designed to undermine her leadership and create division and a spill it failed its purpose. At that point of time, Crisafulli did not have the numbers, so any suggestion of a spill was nebulous, and dumb.

Her crime? She wasn’t prepared to do the bidding of the party machine.

All the leaking did was harm Frecklingt­on’s stature among voters. If you can’t govern your own party, how can you govern the state?

The other source of great anger was the photos, printed in The Sunday Mail, of LNP elders like McIver, Gary Spence and Dave Hutchinson watching the election night coverage from billionair­e Clive Palmer’s yacht.

Palmer ran his own political party and the optics were not good. For some it amounted to a brazen and cavalier middle finger to the grassroots and this incident was mentioned many times in those meetings attended by Crisafulli and Cynthia Hardy. So as Crisafulli began his speech, both Hardy and McIver were listening intently. McIver, after all, had championed Crisafulli’s ascension to the top job.

What they heard was a leader who was determined that the branches would reclaim control of the party.

The days of the executive – the president’s elite group – running the show had to end, Crisafulli declared. The banishing of good members merely because they disagreed with the status quo had to end. Also sitting nearby was Lawrence Springborg, the former Opposition leader. He’d been banished from the party trust for asking why the polling had been leaked by the machine. Crisafulli was blowing the party up, knowing full well that Springborg, initially reluctant, was now ready to run for president.

It was a gutsy speech and

those there described it as his best performanc­e to date. It galvanised the membership and it amplified to them in no uncertain terms that the change would be driven by the right people.

A new broom was arriving, the revolution was coming. Crisafulli knew that the only way to beat Labor in Queensland was to have the parliament­ary and organisati­onal wings of the party rowing in the same direction.

The discipline and unity shown by Labor was a lesson to the conservati­ves. Have your fights behind closed doors, but do not present a public image of disunity.

Fast-forward to next weekend and it will be Springborg running for the presidency, with fresh faces galore keen to join the state executive. There will be more women in key roles, more small businesspe­ople having a say on policy.

A wholesale clean-out of the top roles – including the president’s team – is certain as members jump at the chance

for generation­al change.

Hardy only has herself to blame. Instead of reading the room, she has put her head in the sand and refused to acknowledg­e there’s a problem.

In fact, after News Corp exposed the problems in March, she went on the offensive, describing those who spoke out as “cowards’’. Those “cowards’’ included Springborg, former premier Rob Borbidge, former deputy premier Jeff Seeney, former federal Minister Gary Hardgrave and Brisbane Lord Mayor Adrian Schrinner.

It was the sort of political arrogance and hubris that was a hallmark of the McIver era and it was obvious she was not going to be part of the solution.

Queensland needs a cogent, unified Opposition. It needs a major conservati­ve political party with ideas and policy to take the state forward. That’s why next weekend shapes as the start of the long road back to being competitiv­e against Labor.

It’s about time.

The other source of great anger was the photos of LNP elders like McIver, Gary Spence and Dave Hutchinson watching the election night coverage from billionair­e Clive Palmer’s yacht

 ??  ?? Gary Spence and Bruce McIver on Clive Palmer’s yacht on election night last year.
Opposition Leader David Crisafulli
President Cynthia Hardy
Gary Spence and Bruce McIver on Clive Palmer’s yacht on election night last year. Opposition Leader David Crisafulli President Cynthia Hardy

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