Frankston Mayor Nathan Conroy.
The result means the well-known face of Frankston City Council will face off againstLabor’s Jodie Belyea at a federal byelection to be held in the coming weeks.
Locals are returning to the ballot box more than a year out from when the next federal election is due after Dunkley’s representative,widely respected Labor MP Peta Murphy,died from cancer in December.
Conroy won preselection with a convincing 89 votes,according to two Liberal sources speaking on the condition of anonymity to discuss internal matters. The two other contenders,former state MP Donna Hope and Liberal staffer Bec Buchanan,received about 40 and 25 votes respectively,the sources said.
The Liberal candidate is the first Frankston mayor to ever win three consecutive terms. On his candidate forms,seen byThe Age,Conroy said he would be able to hit the ground running because he had an extensive network of contacts at local sporting clubs and other community organisations.
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“Coming from a background of humble beginnings,having been born into social housing and raised by a mother who worked tirelessly to create opportunities for our family,I understand firsthand the importance of policies that support all Australians,” he wrote in an accompanying statement to Liberal preselectors.
Conroy’s endorsement means the Liberal Party’s chances of reaching50 per cent female representation among its parliamentary ranks,as recommended by a review into the 2022 election loss,are fast diminishing.
Speaking from Frankston on Sunday afternoon,Dutton said the circumstances of the byelection were tragic but that it was also clear Labor’s policies were not working for communities along Melbourne’s sand belt.