November 10, 2024

NSW Election 2023: Seat of Kiama to go to Labor’s Katelin McInerney

Labor #Labor

  • NSW MP Gareth Ward is contesting sex charges
  • He ran as independent in Kiama
  • Projections put him losing to Labor’s Kate MInerney 
  • A former state Liberal minister suspended from Parliament as he fights sex charges looks to have been ousted from his seat at Saturday’s election.

    Gareth Ward, the member for Kiama, is running as an independent and was the frontrunner in his NSW south coast electorate, with Sportsbet giving him the shortest odds of $1.35.

    Labor’s Katelin McInerney, who had longer odds of $5.50, looks set to be elected on a 14 per cent swing to Labor, according to early projections. 

    The Liberal’s Melanie Gibbons, who had odds of $5, is trailing with the Greens Tonia Gray.

    She was parachuted into the seat after losing a local Liberal Party preselection ballot for the seat of Holsworthy, 100km away, where she was the local MP. 

    Mr Ward was suspended from the Legislative Assembly in March last year after he was charged with three counts of indecent assault, one count of sexual intercourse without consent and one count of common assault. 

    Labor’s Kate McInerney has caused an upset after she collected a massive swing in Kiama for Labor of 14 per cent (pictured campaigning with Anthony Albanese)

    Gareth Ward, the member for Kiama, is the frontrunner in his NSW south coast electorate, with Sportsbet giving him the shortest odds of $1.35 (he is pictured left with former premier Gladys Berejiklian)

    He had resigned from the Liberal Party in May 2021, after being part of the moderate faction.

    The former minister for families, communities and disability services is contesting all charges with police alleging he indecently assaulted a 17-year-old boy at Meroo Meadow in 2013 and sexually assaulted a 27-year-old man in Sydney in 2015.

    The case remains before the courts and Mr Ward said he is entitled to the presumption of innocence. 

    Sportsbet predicts the Labor Opposition will pick up the Sydney seats of East Hills, Parramatta, Penrith and Riverstone from the Liberal Party, plus the notionally Labor electorate of Heathcote. 

    That would leave Labor leader Chris Minns with 42 seats – five short of the necessary 47 number needed for a majority in the 93-member lower house, as the Coalition was left with 41 seats.

    Mr Ward was suspended from the Legislative Assembly in March last year after he was charged with three counts of indecent assault, one count of sexual intercourse without consent and one count of common assault (he is pictured during Question Time in 2020)

    Both Mr Minns and Liberal Premier Dominic Perrottet have vowed to refrain from seeking Mr Ward’s support to help form a minority government. 

    This would make three Greens MPs the deciders, along with former gay marriage campaigner Alex Greenwich, regional independents Greg Piper and Joe McGirr, and former Shooters, Fishers and Farmers Party members Helen Dalton, Phil Donato and Roy Butler.

    Labor goes into the election with 36 seats it already holds, but two more with redistributions including the new seat of Leppington and the notionally Labor electorate of Heathcote, taking its existing tally to 38.

    The Coalition starts with 44 seats, following an unfavourable redistribution in Heathcote, a by-election loss to Labor in Bega and the loss of two Liberal MPs to the crossbench because of scandal since the 2019 election. 

    By comparison, Mr Ward’s Liberal rival Melanie Gibbons has longer odds of $5. She was parachuted into the seat after losing a local Liberal Party preselection ballot for the seat of Holsworthy, 100km away, where she was the local MP

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