Once I get the hospital, Ill happily retire: Liberals defend rural heartland against independent – The Age

Posted: October 15, 2022 at 5:29 pm

He believes you have to belong to a major party to make a difference, and argues his 16 years as the local member gives him the experience to secure the facility. If Jacqui Hawkins wins, that will set the campaign back years, Tilley told The Age in Wodonga on Tuesday.

Hawkins, 31, sees a different picture: Tilley has had 16 years in power to deliver, and has so far failed: The report cards there for everyone to see.

Albury-Wodonga Health, which is jointly funded by Victoria and NSW, is advocating for a new single site and a dramatic increase in surgical, recovery and theatre beds because the population is ageing and expected to grow 30 per cent by 2036.

The Victorian branch of the Australian Medical Association agrees a new hospital is needed, as do hundreds of people who have joined local protests organised by community group called Better Border Health. Animal Justice Party candidate and paramedic Mike Fuery said community health was his key concern.

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Selina Moon, who lives on the outskirts of Albury, told The Age the hospital system seemed crowded and underfunded when she gave birth in Wodonga two years ago.

Andrea, a retail store manager in Corryong, about a 90-minute drive away, who did not want her surname published, agreed health and the lack of general practitioners was the biggest issue facing the town. Housing them, though, would be a problem.

I dont even go to the doctor here, I go to another town ... We dont have homes, we dont have rentals. To bring the right doctors up here, they need somewhere to live.

Wodonga resident Terry Irvine told The Age he was concerned the regions were paying for policies that only benefit Melbourne, and politicians were rorting the system while doing f--- all for the community.

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Polling of the seat by RedBridge and paid for by Climate 200, the fundraising vehicle bankrolling some independents, suggests Tilleys primary vote has dropped from 40 per cent since the last election.

Single seat polling is not necessarily indicative of the outcome because the sample sizes tend to be small. However, RedBridge director and former Labor strategist Kos Samaras said a lower primary vote could make it difficult for Tilley to win.

Climate 200 funded the polling on its own and Hawkins said she declined their support, despite shared interests in the environment and integrity.

The poll also showed Hawkins suffers from a lack of recognition, with about 60 per cent of people saying they had not heard of her. If she won, she would be the first woman to hold the seat.

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The poll suggested cost of living was the biggest priority for local voters, followed by health, climate change or the environment, and integrity. Vaccine mandates and lockdowns also came up in a community split in two by COVID-19 border closures. In a wet season with plenty of potholes, road maintenance was also an issue.

The Upper Murray is still recovering from the devastating 2019-2020 bushfire season, and locals say young men have suicided. Rivers were breaching their cap this week under heavy rain.

Hawkins takes her yellow branding seriously: she wears yellow earrings when she sits down with The Age in Wodonga on Monday and her campaign office, which her volunteers now call the hive, is brimming with yellow, including the kitchen sink.

Shes worked for independents such as Cathy McGowan, in bushfire recovery, regional tourism, and manufacturing, after growing up on a farm south of Wodonga at Staghorn Flat.

Tilley a volunteer in the Country Fire Authority and former member of Victoria Police and the Australian Army said he has always acted with integrity for his electorate, and sees himself as independent.

I wear the company colours [of the Liberal Party], but Im a franchisee, and the franchisee fights frequently with the franchisor, Tilley said. If I walk down the street [when he retires], hopefully people can say thanks Bill, you did your best, and not punch me in the face.

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Once I get the hospital, Ill happily retire: Liberals defend rural heartland against independent - The Age

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