Cory Bernardi’s move to quit Liberals for own conservative party causes havoc for Malcolm Turnbull
CORY Bernardi’s decision to quit the Liberal Party threatens to further divide the Turnbull Government — and it’s understood the electricity crisis is one of the rebel SA senator’s key reasons.
- BERNARDI LATEST: Pyne says he’s let SA voters down
- ANALYSIS: Bernardi’s move further erodes Turnbull’s leadership
- SPLIT: Bernardi to quit Liberals, form own political party
- REACTION: ‘You have an allegiance to the Libs, Cory’
- IN-DEPTH: Is he the most conservative man in SA?
REBEL South Australian senator Cory Bernardi’s decision to quit the Liberal Party threatens to further divide the Turnbull Government.
Senator Bernardi this afternooon told the Senate the values and principles he joined the Liberal Party for had given way to “expedient, self-serving, short term ends”.
The Advertiser understands that SA’s electricity crisis is one of the issues that led to Senator Bernardi’s decision to quit.
Speculation of Senator Bernardi’s impending resignation, revealed in The Advertiser by political commentator Andrew Bolt, has further compounded Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull’s political woes as he begins the parliamentary year trailing badly in the polls.
Senator Bernardi was re-elected to the Senate last year for a six-year term.
At last year’s federal election, Senator Bernardi was second on the Liberal ticket behind Senator Birmingham. The Liberal ticket attracted 329,516 first-preference votes, Senator Bernardi received 2043 votes.
It is understood Senator Bernardi’s new party will focus on resisting a push towards expensive renewable energy options and take a tougher stance on immigration — especially from predominantly Muslim nations.
Energy is set to be one of the hot topics of the year in the wake of SA’s statewide blackout last year and ongoing and fierce debate about the role of coal and renewables.
It is understood that Senator Bernardi's close friend Gina Rinehart, who recently expanded her business empire to include the South Australia’s S Kidman & Co cattle company, will offer financial backing.
But fellow conservatives and critics of the Prime Minister Eric Abetz, George Christensen and Tony Abbott have ruled out following their colleague.
While Senator Bernardi has mostly hit headlines for controversial topics — such as wanting to ban Islamic face coverings and comparing the move to legalise same-sex marriage to legalising
bestiality — he is also outspoken about other core conservative issues.
He is likely to continue to emphasise family values, a free market, limited government intervention and focus on social issues including gay marriage.
On Monday the Senator’s office window contained only the Australian Conservatives logo and a “manifesto” for “Our Australia” as “a nation bound by virtues and sustained by faith”. It talks about the importance of freedom and a moral foundation.
Education Minister and SA Senator Simon Birmingham earlier said he was “confident” Senator Bernardi would stand by earlier statements of solidarity.
Another famous SA Liberal defector, Martin Hamilton-Smith — whom Senator Bernardi blasted after he left to take up a Labor ministry — said the Liberals were “looking increasingly like the Greens”.
Recently, Senator Bernardi called on the Government to pull out of the Paris climate change agreement, and called consideration of an emissions intensity scheme “one of the dumbest things” he has heard.
In December, he wrote about the “disconnect that is fuelling the crisis of confidence in the major political parties”.
At the core of that was the “alarmism” of climate change, he wrote:
“In fact, if I were a struggling state or federal political leader, here’s an election-winning platform: I want to make (South) Australian electricity prices the most competitive in the nation/world. To do that, we are going to remove bureaucratic impediments to the construction and operation of new power stations and remove subsidies for uneconomic schemes.”
Treasurer Scott Morrison said SA voters had elected Senator Bernardi to support the Liberal Party in Parliament but it was ultimately up to him to decide whether he left the government benches.
Labor leader Bill Shorten said the Turnbull Government was hopelessly divided and had lost focus on the issues that matter.
“Whether or not Cory Bernardi stays or goes, whether or not Malcolm goes ... that isn’t going to help people pay for their first house,” Mr Shorten. It doesn’t help people find a job or keep a job.”
- with Peter Jean
His web was already spun
OFFICIALLY, it was supposed to be a conservative version of the left-wing political activist group GetUp!
But observers suspected Cory Bernardi was unofficially using the Australian Conservatives group to lay the foundations for his own political party by creating a network of potential supporters and donors.
The Australian Conservatives burst on to the political scene after the federal election with a basic website. Tens of thousands of people reportedly signed up to receive the group’s regular emails.
Founder Senator Bernardi said conservative-minded members of all political parties were welcome to join. The group would pursue issues such as free speech and reforming section 18c of the Racial Discrimination Act.
He believed the group was a counter to GetUp!, which backs progressive causes and uses its army of volunteers to campaign against the Liberals at election time.
The Australian Conservatives is an offshoot of the Bernardi-founded Conservative Leadership Foundation, which operates from offices in Kent Town.
Late last year, “The Australian Majority” became the newest addition to Senator Bernardi’s organisations.
Like GetUp!, the Bernardi groups are not obliged to publicly reveal their sources of income or donors. Senator Bernardi can turn to Australian Conservatives and Conservative Leadership Foundation supporters for financial support for his new venture.
- Peter Jean