My father was Liberal premier, but I can’t support his party

My father was Liberal premier, but I can’t support his party

Rob Baillieu
Rob Baillieu
Volunteers manager for Monique Ryan
April 22, 2022 — 7.30pm
 
 
 
 
 
 

Fifteen months ago, Josh Frydenberg asked if we could get coffee. Today, I’m the volunteer manager for Monique Ryan – leading her 1500 volunteers in an attempt to unseat him. How did this happen?

In 2016, I was encouraged to work for a “moderate” Liberal Party MP, who I am choosing not to name. The notional interview was one of the most homophobic experiences of my life. The climate scepticism, sexism, and disregard for basic scientific principles didn’t help. If these are the moderates, who on earth are the conservatives?

Rob Baillieu: “If these are the moderates, who the hell are the conservatives?”

Rob Baillieu: “If these are the moderates, who the hell are the conservatives?”Credit:Simon Schluter

The truth is there is little difference between a moderate and a conservative if you vote the same way, protect the same selfish culture, and promote the same lines. Some people claim that the moderates are nice people, but it’s not enough to be a nice person. You have to be a good person.

Good people would take action on climate change, they protect the rights of LGBT people, and support an anti-corruption commission. Good people don’t attack their own state as it struggles to control a pandemic, or use charities and public institutions to advance their own political causes.

 

The legacy of Scott Morrison and Frydenberg is a forecast trillion dollars of debt, a stagnant energy sector, the decline of Australia on Transparency International’s corruption index, and fostering what I believe is the worst political culture we’ve ever known. These are not the achievements of decent people.

Their lack of substantive leadership has caused the Liberal Party to lose its way. The commitment to small-l liberal values has collapsed under the weight of party greed and infighting.

As the son of a Liberal premier, I could be in the mix, I could be running a Liberal MP’s campaign. But I can’t. I’m sorry, I don’t want to be rich, nor powerful, at the expense of others. That’s not my business. I don’t claim to be a good person. But I’m trying to be, and that’s more than I can say for many modern Liberal Party MPs.

I’ve slowly distanced myself from the party – in this generation of leadership, I saw little to admire. If we want better leadership we have to foster it in the community ourselves.

 

Josh never followed up on that coffee. That’s OK. Three months after that call, I joined 20 other people in founding Voices of Kooyong. Seven months later, I met Monique Ryan, a paediatric neurologist, and head of the Department of Neurology at the Royal Children’s Hospital.

In Dr Ryan I found a selfless, hard-working, intelligent leader. Someone with a demonstrated lifelong commitment to her community. Someone ready to champion action on climate change and integrity in politics. Someone prepared to do politics differently.

Independent candidate for Kooyong, Monique Ryan.

Independent candidate for Kooyong, Monique Ryan.Credit:Australian Financial Review

In five months, Ryan has built the largest community movement in Kooyong’s history. She has raised millions of dollars from thousands of donors throughout the community. She has put up more corflutes on houses than any candidate in Australia – in sharp contrast to the paid billboards of her opponent.

Remarkably, 80 per cent of her volunteers have never campaigned, volunteered, or been a part of a party. Many ex-Liberal voters. They are the middle ground of Kooyong – tired of the major parties and the self-serving political culture of the last decade.

 

This is a testament to Ryan’s leadership. If she can do all this in five months, imagine what she can do in parliament.

Kooyong could come down to 500 votes, and it could reset Australian political culture for the better. If Ryan unseats the federal treasurer it will send a shockwave through Canberra. No politician can take their electorates for granted anymore. They’ll have to commit to a higher standard of leadership, accountability and political integrity. For the first time in history, the votes of Kooyong electors will matter.

Some people say we are taking out the next generation of Liberal leaders. This is not true – they’ve taken themselves out of the next generation. If your vision of the future is a vision of the past, then you aren’t the leader we need.

The next generation of Liberals are now supporting independent candidates because we know they will be accountable to their electorates not their parties. We know they will champion pragmatism, not ideology. We know they will be a check on the greed andself-interest of some politicians. We know they will offer a vision for the future, not the past.

 

I’ll vote for that.

Rob Baillieu is the son of former Victorian premier Ted Baillieu and is working as the volunteers manager for Monique Ryan, the independent candidate for Kooyong.

 
 
 
Rob Baillieu
Rob Baillieu is the son of former Victorian premier Ted Baillieu and is working as the volunteers manager for Monique Ryan, the independent candidate for Kooyong
 
https://www.smh.com.au/politics/federal/my-father-was-liberal-premier-but-i-can-t-support-his-party-20220422-p5afh3.html
 
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10 comments

What an ungrateful son, shame on him.

Lucca, why ungrateful, he should vote Liberal because his father was former state premier? Ted Baillieu seems to be on same page as his son -– "The next generation of Liberals are now supporting independent candidates because we know they will be accountable to their electorates not their parties. We know they will champion pragmatism, not ideology. We know they will be a check on the greed and self-interest of some politicians. We know they will offer a vision for the future, not the past."

Lucca

Shame on you!  Good to hear of a young man that votes according to his conscience and not the dictates of his elders.

I have been a lifelong Liberal voter and I will never ever vote Liberal again, whilst Scott Morrison is PM.

I agree Upsadaisy, in fact I am not sure if I will ever bother to vote in this election, is anyone worth it?

What a man of character, these are the sorts of people we need in politics.  

Hi Plan B!

Thank you so much for putting this up.

I was only talking to my younger son [50] last night about this situation, he lives in Sydney.

Told me much the same about the Liberals, I think most people think the same. 

Son said much the same he won't be voting Liberals because of the same ideas and wants to go with the Indipendents in his area.

Our sitting Member here is Liberal and we won't be voting for him either.

The Liberal and National parties have become the representatives of dimwits. That is why all the intelligent and aware people will no longer vote for them. You have to be stupid or greedy or on the take to support the Liberal and National parties because they are not there to represent the vast majority of the electorate.

It's great to see these clever community minded Independents standing up to be counted. I hope their electorates take off the party blinkers and vote them into office. 

Let's put the independents first and the major politcal parties last.  It's the only way we can effect change.  The major parties are all the same, beholden to a globalist agenda which is not in the interests of freedom loving Australians.  It's time for a change.  

Governments should protect the people from corporations not protect corporations from the people.

This young man is showing the spirit needed in this day and age when our political system is dredging the bottom of the barrel with massive promises of funding to buy votes. While these are only promises, which based on past experience will probably never be fulfilled, they do corrupt our electoral system. Party politics are the ruination of our system where the "Party" is more important than the country.

The original Democracy did not have Party politics but was made up of Independents voting in the best interests of what they considered to be the good of the country.

Things have changed in Australia over the last decades with the Liberal Party's move to the political right to the point that they are really a Conservative Party and should really change their name to that. Bob Menzies would be turning in his grave knowing where his once centre of the road Party has gone.   

Bought out by Simon Holmes O'Court, and the alledged Independents. Are they calling themselves Independents so they can avoid the AEC requirements for Parties?

45er  So it's okay for the mining industry (most of it foreign owned) to pour $hundreds of thousands into the LNP, similarly the banks, gambling etc, etc and for the unions to do likewise with Labor but when an Australian entrepreneur concerned about  integrity and corruption, broken promises and  inadequate climate action, distributes a fraction, of these amounts amongst  a significant number of unrelated independents are you suggesting there is something wrong or irregular? Are all these other donors to the two major parties registered as political parties as you seem to be suggesting because clearly for their cash they expect political payback?

Ahh I see the Laborites are all up in arms and as usual just like their leader Albo, they don't know the full story. Shame on you, especially upsadaisy!

If this young whippersnapper defected for noble reasons, then that's ok, but, if you do some research you will glean why he did it.

Lucca,

You don't know where these people lean.

I have always voted Liberal ... indeed could have been considered 'rusted on'.

In all conscience I could not vote for the Liberals whilst Morrison is at the helm.   Many of his own members of parliament don't trust him.  This is fair judgement and should be taken on board.

Lucca,  I now suspect that you will consider me a Laborite.  I am not, but in fair conscience want what is best for Australia.

perhaps your admonition might be more persuasive if you can show why you think young Baillieu is ungrateful.

I have raised my children to be independent thinkers.

We may not always agree on matters.  I am very proud of them.

If one recalls the photo of Morrison meeting victims of the horrific bushfires - in which he was indeed tardy - a man refused to shake Morrison's hand.  What did Morrison do.  Grabbed the mans hand and shook it in spite of this.  Not only was this extremely rude, but tantamount to assault.

This is Morrison.

10 comments



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