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The Western Australian Division of the Liberal Party of Australia had a leadership spill on 30 January 2023. Libby Mettam defeated David Honey to become the leader of the Liberal Party in Western Australia.
The March 2021 Western Australian state election saw the Liberal Party win just two seats in the lower house and seven seats in the upper house, a record loss. In the aftermath of the election, David Honey was elected leader of the party and Libby Mettam, the only other lower house Liberal member, was elected deputy leader. As the Liberal Party had fewer lower house seats than the National Party, Honey did not become the leader of the opposition, but the two parties did form an alliance, whereby Liberal MPs would be part of the shadow cabinet.
Over the two years following the 2021 election, it became viewed as increasingly likely that Honey would be replaced as leader by Mettam. [1] [2] [3] According to an anonymous Liberal MP, the party had been discussing making Mettam the leader for the entire duration of Honey's leadership. [4] An opinion poll by Painted Dog Research and published in The West Australian in October 2022 showed that nine percent of respondents were satisfied with Honey's performance, 31 percent were dissatisfied, and 60 percent did not know. [1] [5] Another poll by Painted Dog Research done on 5 January 2023 showed that ten percent of respondents believed that Honey was the right person to lead the Liberal Party, 29 percent of respondents believed that Mettam was the right person to lead the party, and 55 percent of respondents did not know. [6] Mettam had gained a higher profile than Honey through her position as shadow minister for health, in which she was outspoken on weaknesses in the state's health system. [3] [6]
On Friday, 27 January 2023, Mettam revealed her intention to challenge Honey for the leadership at a special partyroom meeting the following week. The move came the same day that Nationals leader Mia Davies announced her resignation from the position. [4] [7] [8] The meeting occurred on 30 January. Honey initially said that he would contest the leadership spill, [9] [10] but pulled out on the morning of the partyroom meeting, allowing Mettam to be voted in unopposed. Upper house MP Steve Thomas was elected deputy Liberal leader. [11] [12] [13]
According to ABC News and The West Australian, Honey was supported only by Nick Goiran and Neil Thomson, with Peter Collier, Donna Faragher, Steve Martin, Tjorn Sibma, and Thomas supporting Mettam, [8] [14] although Sibma [15] and Thomas were the only people to publicly declare where their support lay. [12]
Upon being voted in as leader, Mettam said she would "draw a line in the sand" against the Clan, a controversial group of powerbrokers within the party including Peter Collier and Goiran. [16] [17] She removed Goiran from the shadow cabinet soon after becoming leader, [18] [19] but allowed Collier to stay as he had apologised for language used in the Clan. [20] She also tried to removed Goiran as the Liberal Party parliamentary secretary but a majority of Liberal MPs voted against that motion. [17] [21] Three days later, Goiran resigned as the parliamentary secretary. [22] [23]
Although some thought that Honey would resign from parliament if defeated in a leadership spill, he said that he would continue on in parliament. [10]
The first opinion poll following the leadership spill, a Painted Dog Research poll done in March 2023, showed that Mettam's approval rating was 24 percent and disapproval at 18 percent. [24]
Cottesloe is a Legislative Assembly electorate in the state of Western Australia. Cottesloe is named for the western Perth suburb of Cottesloe, which falls within its borders. Its previous member, Colin Barnett, was the 29th Premier of Western Australia. The current member, David Honey, was elected in a by-election after Barnett resigned in 2018.
Alannah Joan Geraldine Cecilia MacTiernan is a former Australian politician. From 1988 to 2023, she has served in politics at a federal, state, and local level, including as a minister in the Western Australian state governments of Geoff Gallop, Alan Carpenter, and Mark McGowan. She is best known for her role as the minister for planning and infrastructure during the construction of the Mandurah line. Born in Melbourne, she moved to Perth to study at the University of Western Australia, graduating with a Bachelor of Arts and later with a law degree. She worked for the Department of Employment before practising as a lawyer between 1986 and 1992. During this time, she also served on the Perth City Council. In 1976, MacTiernan joined the Australian Labor Party, and at the 1993 Western Australian state election, she was elected to the Legislative Council's East Metropolitan Region. She became a shadow minister in October 1994, and she was transferred to the Legislative Assembly at the 1996 state election, winning the seat of Armadale.
Steven Caldwell Thomas is an Australian politician. He is a Liberal member of the Western Australian Legislative Council, having represented South West Region since 2017. He served as the party's deputy leader from 2023 to 2024. He was previously a member of the Western Australian Legislative Assembly from 2005 to 2008 representing the electorate of Capel.
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