Queensland Libs – farcical the next day too…

As an update to my leadership stoush Santoro plot story yesterday, over the fold is Christian Kerr’s tale of today’s twists and turns in the farcical saga of the Santoro payback.

Christian Kerr writes in today’s Crikey:

Santo Santoro’s right hand man, State Liberal MP Tim Nicholls, is probably unlucky Queensland Premier Peter Beattie has been in Africa all week.

His failed challenge to State Liberal leader Bruce Flegg might otherwise have at least got to first base. Peter Beattie would surely have been tempted to “lend” him a government backbencher for a day so he could get a seconder.

On Monday and Tuesday, Nicholls hit the phones contacting his colleagues about a possible challenge to Flegg. That wasn’t a hard task. If he didn’t ring Flegg, he only had to make six calls.

On Tuesday night, he went on television to say that he was consulting his colleagues and would make an announcement after he had done so.

By yesterday morning, he was on a plane to Canberra – allegedly on “parliamentary committee business”, but also handily meaning he could attend Santoro’s farewell (or wake) at the Santa Lucia Trattoria in Kingston last night.

As he flew out it became apparent that he didn’t have the numbers to roll Flegg. He didn’t even have a seconder. Beattie must be regretting his absence in distant Kenya. Had he been around he would have surely been tempted to offer up some hapless (or hopeless) government backbencher as a seconder just to cause even more turmoil among his very troubled opponents!

Fellow first term MP, Ray Stevens, summarised the Nicholls “challenge” this way:

“I believe, and this is my personal belief only, that he (Nicholls) was the pawn used by some other people involved in the party that were intent on squaring up with Bruce Flegg over other matters, and I think its disappointing they sort of used Tim Nicholls to push their point.”

The “they”, sources say, are obviously the very soon to be former Senator Santoro and Queensland Liberal state director Geoff Greene, who has been industriously backgrounding the local media on Flegg for weeks in a most unbecoming way.

The Nicholls challenge has been an unmitigated PR disaster. It does not mean Flegg is safe in the long term – it just means that Nicholls won’t be the one who will roll him.

So it was not only Santo Santoro who was drowning his sorrows at Santa Lucia last night.


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6 responses to “Queensland Libs – farcical the next day too…”

  1. Down and Out Of Sài Gòn

    “Seconder”? Now I’m confused, Mark. Can a Labor backbencher second a challenge to the head of the Liberal in Queensland? Or is it as the Deputy Leader of the Opposition?

  2. Mark

    CK is being sarcastic.

  3. wpd

    Flegg has no moral authority in this dispute given the way he shafted Quinn.

    BTW The idea that Quinn wants to be a Senator is risible. It is simply an attempt to spite Santo.

    And people say the ALP is ‘hopeless’ because it is driven by factions. Please.

  4. steve

    It appears that the Qld Nats are going to take full edvantage of the Libs factional wars too which will be very costly for the Libs.

  5. steve

    Even worse for the Liberal Factions is this polling

  6. Graham Bell

    Steve and Mark:
    That would be quite a worrying poll and news report of the Liberals in Queensland …. but all it does is reflect what is happening out there in the real world.

    Previously, I had suggested theat the Liberals face reality for a change and amalgamate with the Australian Labor Party.

    Now I have a much better suggestion: Disband the Liberal Party in Queensland altogether.

    Have the former Liberals members who love factional plots and brawls and who are keen to free things up for business join the ALP. Doing so would liven up the stale old ALP.

    But for those former Liberals members who believe in noblesse oblige, small government, individual liberty, social responsibility and the like …. have them join the Australian Democrats. Doing so would revitalize the Australian Democrats and the former Liberals would enjoy the fresh breezes of openness, commitment and progress in their new party.

    And why not? It’s the sort of thing that worked so well in former Soviet satellites when the local monolithic Communist Parties collapsed and former Communists had to adapt to democracy. It would be a win-win-win for the voters too.

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