Shoalhaven Independents Group | |
|---|---|
| | |
| Abbreviation |
|
| Leader | Patricia White |
| Founder | Greg Watson |
| Headquarters | Vincentia, New South Wales, Australia [1] |
| Ideology | Localism Conservative [2] |
| Political position | Right-wing [3] [4] |
| Slogan | "Community Honesty Experience Integrity" [5] |
| Shoalhaven City Council | 4 / 13 |
The Shoalhaven Independents Group (SIG), also known simply as the Shoalhaven Independents, is an Australian political party that contests local government elections for Shoalhaven City Council in New South Wales. [6] The party is registered with the New South Wales Electoral Commission (NSWEC). [1]
Shoalhaven Independents has existed since at least 2004, and has been led by Greg Watson − who was elected mayor in 1999 − for most of that time. [7] The party won a majority at the 2004 local elections, with Watson re-elected mayor and six SIG candidates elected as councillors. He was defeated in 2008 by Paul Green, and unsuccessfully contested the 2012 and 2016 elections as well. [8] [9] [10]
At the 2021 local elections, SIG won the largest number of councillors − 4 out of 12 − but fell short of winning a plurality as incumbent Greens mayor Amanda Findley was re-elected. [11] The party had endorsed three candidates for the mayoral election, including former Team Gash councillor Patricia White. [12] [13] [14]
Watson retired at the 2024 local elections after 50 years as a councillor, with White taking over as SIG leader. [15] [16] The party pledged to re-introduce Australia Day Awards and citizenship ceremonies on 26 January if elected to a majority. [17] [18]
Following the 2004 election, The Sydney Morning Herald reported that SIG's victory was "helped by thousands of dollars of developers' money that paid for a television, radio and print election campaign" larger than that of any other candidate. [19] [20] The donations to SIG for the 2004 election totalled $91,017. [21] [22]
In 2008, it was found that SIG's funding declaration failed to disclose four years' worth of political donations, including Watson's unsuccessful campaign for the electorate of South Coast at the 2003 state election. [23] [24] [25]