As Tim Smiths prospects darken, Kew backs its head-kicker – The Age

Posted: November 5, 2021 at 9:43 pm

I am pretty cranky with Matthew saying he shouldnt stand again. Being the head-kicker, a lot of people dont like him, but we need someone like that in state opposition. A lot of the Liberal opposition pollies have been there for too long and dont do anything. He works like a devil.

She warned against the state party headquarters intervening in a Kew preselection. All hell would break loose if they did.

Matthew Guy on Thursday stood by his view that Tim Smith should quit politics. Credit:Eddie Jim

Mr Smith has been working all week to gauge the local support for him recontesting Kew, a once-safe seat likely to be decided at the next election by the flow of Greens preferences. Not all his former backers believe he should.

Jolyon Edwards, the owner of The Cleaning Shop in Kew for more than 30 years and the president of the local Studley Park branch of the Liberal Party, has known Mr Smith since he was a young, local mayor campaigning against clearway parking restrictions along the busy shopping strip.

During the 2018 state election, Mr Edwards agreed for a massive billboard of Mr Smiths face to be erected on his shop at the top of the High Street hill.

He agrees with Mr Smiths conservative politics but said the focus needed to be on the impact of the governments lockdown policies on small and medium-sized businesses and peoples mental health not the career prospects of one MP.

Kew trader and Liberal Party branch president Jolyon Edwards has told Tim Smith to put the interests of the party first. Credit:Simon Schluter

He said the stakes at the next election were made clear to him eight weeks ago when an older woman who had walked past his shop for years stopped and bluntly told him that being cut off from friends and family had made her contemplate suicide.

She had effectively researched how to end her own life because she couldnt see a way out, he said.

Like Ms Hargreaves, Mr Edwards received a call from Mr Smith on Sunday. The counsel he offered was very different.

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My opinion is he needs to do some soul-searching and ultimately come up with whats best for the Liberal Party in supporting Matthew Guy and the team and hopefully, challenging the government.

Mr Smith is yet to make a decision on whether to seek re-election in Kew. As of Thursday, there were no rival candidates nominated for preselection. Nominations close on November 12.

The last time a Liberal leader tried to influence a Kew preselection, it didnt end well.

In 2014, when state government minister Mary Wooldridge lost her seat in a redistribution, then-premier Denis Napthine tried to parachute her into Kew. As soon as she landed, Ms Wooldridge realised that the seat had been secured long ago by Mr Smith.

For the best part of two years, Mr Smith had embedded himself with the branch members, party stalwarts and Liberal powerbrokers of Kew. One of his preselection fliers carried endorsements from Mr Edwards, Olympic rowers David Crawshay and Drew Ginn, and a clutch of local party heavyweights, Bill Clancy, Kyle Wightman, Pat Holdenson and Richard Alston.

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Mr Alston, a former state president and chairman of the Kooyong Electorate Conference which controls federal Treasurer Josh Frydenbergs overlapping federal seat, backed Mr Smith in 2014 as a candidate for much-needed party renewal. When contacted by The Age on Thursday, he said his view about Mr Smith hadnt changed.

We all make mistakes, he said. This is a serious one, as Tim acknowledges, but you need a proportionate response. The punishment ought to fit the crime.

Mr Frydenberg is a friend and political ally of Mr Smith and Mr Guy, who understands from his own seat how hard the Liberal Party needs to work to hang onto Kew, an electorate now ringed by Labor territory. His support will carry enormous weight in a contested preselection ballot. So far, his public comments about Mr Smith have been carefully balanced.

He needs to take the time to reflect on his own position, do some soul-searching and reflect on the words of his state leader, Matthew Guy, and make a decision on his future in coming weeks, Mr Frydenberg said on Thursday.

A party insider said that Mr Frydenbergs support was essential to Mr Smith. I dont think Tim would be taking the route he has unless he has Joshs backing that he can tough this out.

There are a little over 400 Liberal Party members registered to branches in Kew. If Mr Smith decides to contest preselection, he needs a simple majority to win. From there, his path back to state politics would still be fraught.

The partys administrative committee has the power to block preselections and, in effect, insert its own candidates. Whoever is preselected would then face a difficult task to hold the seat against a rising Labor and Greens vote.

Although Mr Smiths prospects of finding a way through all this appear bleak, a defiant message is starting to resonate from Liberal branch members: dont let them hound you out.

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As Tim Smiths prospects darken, Kew backs its head-kicker - The Age

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