Liberal Party members are running in the upcoming council elections as independents and under the banner of community tickets, with no mention on their websites or promotional material that they hold Liberal Party membership.
The NSW Liberal Party does not endorse candidates in some council areas, including North Sydney, Kiama and Shoalhaven.
Local Liberals who wish to run for office in those councils are not allowed, under Liberal Party rules and the NSW Electoral Act, to use Liberal Party branding, even if they openly “identify” as Liberals.
Elle Prevost, a first-time candidate who is running as an independent for North Sydney council, said she was a “proud Liberal party member”.
“I am a Liberal, but we are not endorsed in the North Sydney area,” she said. “Maybe it’s me being naive, but because I am not endorsed by the Liberal Party, my understanding is I’m an independent.”
Ms Prevost’s ticket is called “Team Elle”. Its website announces her as an “Independent for North Sydney council” and her Liberal Party membership is not mentioned. The membership is disclosed in Ms Prevost’s candidate nomination form, filed under a subheading in a PDF document on the NSW Electoral Commission website.
“This is a really Liberal area, so I should be screaming it from the rooftops because it would win me more votes,” she said.
Retired naval officer Mark Croxford is a member of the executive of the NSW Liberal Party, and a Liberal Party member. But his connection to the Liberal Party is not mentioned on the promotional materials for his run at the Kiama council in the upcoming elections on December 4.
Mr Croxford is at the top of the Your Community Candidates ticket, which pledges to “form a council free from party political agendas”. The group’s website urges voters not to “risk a council influenced by party politics” and says that “party politics has no place in local government”.
Mr Croxford’s “bio” on the Your Community Candidates website lists his background as a lobbyist and a senior ministerial adviser in the Howard government, but not his position as a country representative on the NSW Liberal Party executive, or his party membership.
The membership is declared on his nomination form on the Electoral Commission website.
“I hide in the open,” Mr Croxford said. “I am in the Liberal Party for the purpose of federal and state politics. I personally don’t believe there is any room for party politics in local politics.”
He said he always discloses his Liberal Party roots when he is speaking to constituents.
“I am happy to say I am a Liberal member but as a councillor I want to be a representative of my community,” he said.
The Declaration of Independents Local Government, created by the Voices of North Sydney group, has been signed by 56 candidates in the Lane Cove, North Sydney, Willoughby, Hunters Hill and Georges River councils.
Rod Simpson, the co-convener of the Voices of North Sydney group, says the intention of the declaration is to “get some transparency into local government”.
“It’s asking people what their political status is and whether they have been [a member of a political party] in the past and whether they have made political donations or been a staffer,” says Mr Simpson, who is a former environment commissioner with the Greater Sydney Commission.
“It’s really hard for people to untangle this and we are just trying to bring it up to the surface and make it easy for people to see what on earth is going on.”
The Declaration’s stated intention is to “differentiate ‘community-minded independents’ from ‘independents’ who are affiliated with political parties”. A “community minded independent” is defined as a candidate who is “not currently a member of a political party, and will vote as an individual”.
At the Shoalhaven Council, Serena Copley is billed as an independent on the ballot form, but the NSW Electoral Commission records show she is also a Liberal Party member.
The same goes for the other candidates on her ticket, Fred Campbell, Leonard White and Francoise Sikora.
Ms Copley’s team is called “A Fresh Approach” and does not mention any connection with the Liberal Party in its promotional materials.
In response to questions from The Sydney Morning Herald, Ms Copley said she had been a member of the Shoalhaven community for more than 30 years.
“They know me and what I stand for,” she said. “I am running as an independent so I can represent my community and only my community, not any party or their agenda.”
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