Informed Medical Options Party | |
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Abbreviation | IMOP, IMOParty |
Leader | Michael O'Neill |
Secretary | Michael O'Neill |
Founder | Michael O'Neill |
Founded | 26 October 2016 |
Dissolved | 17 August 2023 |
Merged into | HEART Party |
Headquarters | West Kempsey, NSW |
Ideology | Anti-vaccination Anti-fluoridation |
Website | |
imoparty | |
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The Informed Medical Options Party, formerly known as the Involuntary Medication Objectors (Vaccination/Fluoride) Party, was an Australian political party. The party's policies opposed compulsory vaccination programs and water fluoridation. [1] [2] The Party states that these are "mass-medication programs" where there is "genuine scientific uncertainty about the benefits and risks in a genetically diverse population". Australian Medical Association president Tony Bartone said the party's views "lack the backing of scientific evidence" and that its members "should consider the harm that can ensue upon the Australian community". [3] It was registered for federal elections on 26 October 2016. [4]
Party founder Michael O'Neill said the "anti-vaxxer" label regularly used by critics was "insulting". [5]
In August 2023, the party merged with the Health Australia Party (HAP) to form the HEART Party, although HAP withdrew from HEART on 10 October 2023. [6] [7]
The party ran candidates in New South Wales, Queensland and Western Australia in the 2019 Australian federal election for the Australian Senate and received a total of 17,055 total votes as first preference. [8] They were not successful in having a candidate elected. [9]
In February 2020, the Federal Health Minister Greg Hunt opposed the party's application to change its name to the Informed Medical Options Party saying "that such a name would be misleading". [3] The party was successful in its application. [5]
In March 2020, Tom Barnett, a party candidate in the 2019 federal election, created a video discussing coronavirus. In it, he stated: "You can’t catch a virus; it's impossible" and "the only way that you can catch a virus is by having it injected into your bloodstream". The video was removed from Facebook and YouTube, with the companies stating that the video was in breach of their policies. [10]
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