NSW’s Matt Kean comes to town spruiking the Victorian Liberals’ ‘progressive’ credentials

The New South Wales treasurer and energy minister insists the Liberal party in Victoria can appeal to teal voters

As all eyes were on the lovefest between Victoria’s premier, Daniel Andrews, and his New South Wales counterpart, Dominic Perrottet, another political meeting was taking place in Melbourne’s beachside suburb of Elwood on Thursday.

Ahead of a meeting of energy ministers on Friday, NSW’s Liberal treasurer and former environment minister, Matt Kean, joined the Victorian Liberal’s deputy leader, David Southwick, and the Brighton MP, James Newbury, to compare electric vehicle policies.

“Dom Perrottet and Dan Andrews can have their bromance but what we want to see, both myself and Dom Perrottet, is a Liberal government here in Victoria,” Kean told Guardian Australia.

The meeting came after the teal-aligned son of former Liberal premier Ted Baillieu, Rob Baillieu, suggested a Kean-like figure was needed to rejuvenate the party’s standing in Victoria. It also followed reports Peter Dutton would not be joining the campaign trail.

Addressing Baillieu’s suggestion, Kean was adamant the Victorian Liberals could appeal to socially progressive voters.

“What saw at the federal level was a backlash from traditional Liberal voters who felt they didn’t have a home within the Liberal party,” Kean said.

“The Victorian Liberal opposition has heard that message, and wants to ensure that people that are socially progressive but economically rational do have a place around the Liberal table.”

Newbury said he consulted Kean last year before the Victorian Coalition announced a plan to legislate an emissions reduction target of 50% by 2030 and reach net zero by 2050, which bears a resemblance to NSW’s plan.

“You can see your advice in the way we’ve shaped our policy,” Newbury told Kean on Thursday. “You can see how we have looked to NSW and your successes and it won’t be the end of it. We’re going to pinch from you a little bit more.”

David Southwick at a meeting with Matt Kean and James Newbury
Southwick says he had been pushing for strong action on the climate crisis prior to the federal election. Photograph: Penny Stephens

Earlier this week, the Victorian Coalition announced that, if elected in November, they will pause the state’s electric vehicle tax – currently subject of a high court challenge – and spend $50m to boost the uptake of low-emission cars, including 600 new charging stations. Kean announced $39.4m to introduce 500 charging stations in NSW the same day.

The policies are a marked contrast from the Coalition’s position at the 2018 Victorian election, which included opposing the government’s net zero target and promising to build a new power station, fuelled by the cheapest option out of coal, gas or renewables.

At the time, peak body Environment Victoria described the Coalition as “environmentally reckless” and accused the opposition leader, Matthew Guy, of ignoring climate change.

The party went on to suffer a devastating loss. Newbury and Southwick’s margins shrank to 1.1% and 0.3%, respectively.

An electoral redistribution ahead of this year’s election sees Newbury’s shrink further to 0.5%, and Southwick’s seat of Caulfield turns from Liberal to Labor, albeit with a razor-thin 0.2% margin.

The duo are also facing challenges from independent candidates inspired by Zoe Daniel winning the plum Liberal seat of Goldstein at the federal election, which overlaps entirely with Brighton and takes in parts of Caulfield.

But Newbury and Southwick said they were pushing for stronger action on climate change well before the federal poll.

“What [the federal election] did is it actually allowed other people to get on board,” Southwick said.

“We were able to prove that we’ve got to be more relevant to Victorians, it’s something that’s so important, it matters. This is where the party needs to be.”

The duo faced resistance from some MPs in their own party over the policy, as well as their more progressive positions to support the Labor government’s bill to set up an independent treaty authority and unequivocally rule out amending laws banning gay conversion “therapy”.

But Kean, who is considered a leading moderate voice within the party, said it was imperative Liberals modernised and reflected the concerns of Australians.

“This is a new generation of Liberals that are coming through that are representing the values of our times,” he said.

These values, he said, include conserving the environment, affording equal economic opportunities to all Australians “regardless of their gender, or who they choose to love, or who they choose to worship” and helping young people enter the property market.

Earlier this week, Victoria’s energy minister, Lily D’Ambrosio, said voters couldn’t trust the opposition when it came to the environment and spruiked the government’s plans to revive the State Electricity Commission.

The government wants half of all new cars sold in Victoria by 2030 to be zero-emission vehicles and offers subsidies of up to $3,000 for ZEVs under $68,740, she said.

Contributor

Benita Kolovos

The GuardianTramp

Related Content

Article image
Lovefest between NSW and Victorian premiers on full display while Matthew Guy is out of sight
Dominic Perrottet praises partnership with Daniel Andrews when asked about Victoria’s Liberal leader

Benita Kolovos

30, Aug, 2022 @5:30 PM

Article image
Guardian Essential poll: 64% of young voters would consider backing independents in NSW and Victorian elections
After success of federal ‘teals’, about half of all respondents are thinking about a shift away from major parties

Benita Kolovos

08, Sep, 2022 @5:30 PM

Article image
What will the teal wave mean for Victorian and NSW state elections?
Swings at federal election hint at shifts that could be replicated in state polls due in November and March

Ben Raue

11, Jun, 2022 @8:00 PM

Article image
Perrottet and Andrews announce joint plan to overhaul Albury Base hospital
NSW premier says $550m project to boost health in border region is a ‘great example of co-operation across political lines’

Tamsin Rose and Benita Kolovos

27, Oct, 2022 @1:14 AM

Article image
Victorian Greens to preference Labor above Liberals as major parties make health pledges
Samantha Ratnam rules out deal with the Liberals, will direct preferences to ‘progressive’ candidates

Benita Kolovos and Adeshola Ore

09, Nov, 2022 @6:02 AM

Article image
Voters will reject Liberals if they don’t have enough female candidates, Matt Kean says
NSW treasurer savaged his party’s preselection processes and warned that the community expects more diversity in its parliaments

Tamsin Rose

30, Nov, 2022 @7:51 AM

Article image
Daniel Andrews vindicated in Victorian election that became a referendum on his pandemic response
Labor’s win lets its state leader reshape his legacy, with his third term allowing him to become the party’s longest-serving premier

Benita Kolovos

26, Nov, 2022 @1:37 PM

Article image
Victorian opposition makes $160m bus overhaul election promise as Labor flags more dog parks
Matthew Guy seeks to woo outer-metropolitan voters while Daniel Andrews campaigns in inner suburbs on day three of the Victoria election

Benita Kolovos and Adeshola Ore

04, Nov, 2022 @4:14 AM

Article image
Victorian election 2022: what you need to know ahead of voting on 26 November
Can Daniel Andrews win a third term as premier? Will teal independents repeat their federal success? And how, when and where can people in Victoria vote?

Benita Kolovos

25, Nov, 2022 @4:09 AM

Article image
Former Bayside mayor Clarke Martin announces run as ‘teal’ candidate in Victorian election
Councillor to contest for third time in Sandringham with backing of group that campaigned for independent federal MP Zoe Daniel

Benita Kolovos

25, Aug, 2022 @7:37 AM