Who,me? Couldn’t be. Rob Stokes,a former NSW cabinet minister,was appointed to a committee to rescue the NSW division of the Liberal Party – without his knowledge.Credit:Louise Kennerley
Perhaps it was an administrative oversight,just like the one that saw the party miss a well-publicised deadline to nominate candidates for the council elections. Stokes,a former senior NSW cabinet minister,is still a respected figure on Macquarie Street. He is a clean skin,close to state Opposition Leader Mark Speakman,and he was Dutton’s personal choice to run in Mackellar in next year’s federal election. (Stokes also politely declined that offer.) Perhaps someone simply forgot to pick up the phone to call him?
The more likely theory,however,is that Stokes was there as “window dressing”,as one senior moderate Liberal swiftly described his appointment on Tuesday. Of the three-man panel,two were Victorian right-wingers. They are the former senator Richard Alston and the former Victorian treasurer Alan Stockdale,so Stokes’ moderate view was never going to prevail. Sceptics quickly joined the dots. The federal plan was a Dutton-led right-wing takeover of NSW,backed wholeheartedly by former prime minister Tony Abbott.
Aside from hailing from Victoria,where the Liberals have been locked in a brutal civil war for years,82-year-old Alston and 79-year-old Stockdale – that’s a combined age of 161 – are curious picks to lead NSW out of its troubles and modernise a party that is also bitterly divided. “Old,white and right” was how they were labelled by one exasperated long-serving senior Liberal operative. Dutton used the more genteel descriptor,“council of wise elders”.
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In what has become a defining characteristic of the Liberals,there was no attempt at gender diversity on the committee. Instead,the party’s so-called women’s problem continues despite repeated warnings and even an election loss,as the Morrison government learnt in 2022.
Charlotte Mortlock,who runs the Coalition’s women’s advocacy group Hilma’s Network,is dismayed. “It is imperative that a woman is added to the committee,” Mortlock says. “Not including any women sends a bad message to female members and voters,and would be a gross oversight in what is supposed to be a constructive intervention.”
The Liberal Party has many capable women. Obvious names would be former NSW Liberal leader Kerry Chikarovski,former senator and communications minister Helen Coonan or recently retired senator Marise Payne.