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Groom votes: Toowoomba candidates meet with voters as campaign reaches last two weeks to May 3 federal election

Chronicle readers have revealed the top issue guiding their vote on May 3, as candidates flood the zone with a flurry of pitches and pledges. Here’s the latest from the campaign trail:

Anthony Albanese addresses the National Press Club as federal election nears

The federal election campaign in Groom is reaching the home stretch, and candidates have been busy making a flurry of pitches, promises and pledges as voters get ready to hit the polls.

It comes as early voting started across Toowoomba last week, with large numbers expected at up to five pre-polling stations.

Stories, including campaign announcements, key moments and other issues, will be added to this story.

Here is a wrap of what we’ve learnt so far:

‘Run out of a signs’: Greens candidate reveals ‘dream’ campaign

Greens candidate for Groom Alyce Nelligan.
Greens candidate for Groom Alyce Nelligan.

The Greens’ Groom candidate Alyce Nelligan has “run out” of corflutes and flyers this week, in what she says has been the best campaign she’s run for any level of government.

The disability and community advocate, who achieved the party’s best result in the Toowoomba seat at the 2019 election, said she was receiving daily volunteering offers from sections of the community she didn’t normally reach.

“We’ve had an absolutely wonderful campaign so far in Groom - it’s been quite a dream run,” Ms Nelligan said.

“We’ve had lots of people sign up every day wanting to volunteer on people and on election day obviously, beautiful messages of support, people wanting how-to-vote cards early.

“We’ve actually run out of signs with my face on it which is so lovely.

“I’m getting to meet a lot of different people and I’m getting a lot more volunteer support from people that I just haven’t met and not part of my network.”

Holt backs women's not-for-profit as election day looms

Independent for Groom Suzie Holt with Protea Place chief executive Amanda Dalton.
Independent for Groom Suzie Holt with Protea Place chief executive Amanda Dalton.

Independent Suzie Holt this week revealed she would fight for at least $1.6m in funding for Toowoomba women’s support service Protea Place.

Ms Holt, who has made a flurry of announcements as she looks to secure votes in the final days of the campaign, said the not-for-profit needed one-off money to purchase a new property and extra support to continue operations.

“How do you expect a woman to leave an abusive relationship if she can’t guarantee that the support she needs will still be there in a few months time?” she said in a statement.

“It’s not good enough. They need the reassurance and the stability that longer funding cycles provide.”

Ms Holt’s commitment, which isn’t a guarantee of funding, comes after all candidates were quizzed over their stances on tackling domestic and family violence following two incidents where local women were allegedly killed at the hands of their partners.

Key issues revealed by polling

Chronicle voters have revealed the top issue on their minds for upcoming federal election — and it won’t be a surprise.

The biggest issue for Groom voters is how the next government will work to ease cost of living, which was the top concern for 42 per cent of voters.

Other big issues included addressing the housing crisis (16 per cent) and cutting immigration rates (14 per cent).

Issues that were not the top priority for respondents including boosting mental health services or reducing inflation.

Garth Hamilton appears to still be in the box seat to remain Groom’s member of parliament, with 43 per cent of surveyed voters indicating the Liberal-National Party member would be their first preference.

Independent Suzie Holt also polled strongly, with 34 per cent of respondents indicating she would be their first preference.

If the two-candidate race played out like it did in 2022, 54 per cent of respondents said they would preference Mr Hamilton over Ms Holt.

Independent fires back at One Nation’s immigration comments

Rebecca Konz; Kirstie Smolenski.
Rebecca Konz; Kirstie Smolenski.

Independent Kirstie Smolenski has fired back at comments by Groom’s One Nation candidate Rebecca Konz over the performance of migrant workers in the health, aged and disability care systems.

Ms Konz, who is running on a platform of “zero or net zero” immigration as part of the party’s pitch to the electorate, told News Corp she had received mixed opinions from residents about the quality of overseas workers in the aged care sector.

“Yes, there are international people working in those jobs, but they’re not working from a place of care,” she said at early voting last week.

“They want the money, they send the money back home to wherever they came from, so they’re actually working and sending money back overseas, and they’re not engaging with the aged care of the people that they’re caring for because it’s a job.”

The health care sector is Toowoomba’s largest employer, boasting a workforce of more than 14,000 people as of the 2021 census data.

Ms Smolenski, who clarified last week she was a nurse-in-training have left the industry back in 2005, said in her experience most issues to do with overseas workers were not to do with a lack of care but rather communication problems.

“My personal experience, and obviously I’ve had a lot of it, is that these migrant workers, and there are a lot of them and they’re from a lot different nationalities and also from a lot of different scenarios,” she said.

“The people in aged care are incredibly caring and the ineffectiveness is a two-way thing and in my experience it’s about communication and communication probably combined with different cultures.”

Ms Smolenski slammed any idea to cut immigration relating to nursing and care positions, saying the industry would fall in a “screaming heap” if it was to occur.

“Our health care system at the moment and especially locally and regionally is completely propped up by immigration and it would fall in a screaming heap if we cut immigration because we are not recruiting enough local Australians into the job,” she said.

“That’s something that I really want to focus on – I don’t feel the training that we have is adequate.

“I’m a third year nursing student – we’ve got students coming out of UniSQ who have not set foot in a hospital yet.”

‘Amazing job’: Former mayor endorses Hamilton

Garth Hamilton has earned the endorsement of former Toowoomba mayor Paul Antonio.
Garth Hamilton has earned the endorsement of former Toowoomba mayor Paul Antonio.

Former Toowoomba mayor Paul Antonio has thrown his support behind LNP incumbent Garth Hamilton, arguing the 2025 election was the “most critical” of his lifetime.

Mr Antonio, who was mayor of the region from 2012 to 2023, said he believed Mr Hamilton had demonstrated the right work ethic to continue representing as MP.

“Garth has done an amazing job, he has good contacts in Canberra on both sides of politics and he’s invaluable to the seat of Groom and to the future of the Toowoomba region,” he said in a video statement.

“He knew both sides of politics, and if you wanted to see someone, he was the man that you spoke to.”

Smolenski’s childcare policy similar to Labor’s

Independent Kirstie Smolenski has unveiled her desire to reform childcare across Australia — and it bears striking similarities to Labor’s plan.

Ms Smolenski revealed she would support a move to a three-day guarantee for eligible families across the nation if she was elected into Groom, as well as investment into more centres in what are called childcare deserts.

“(I’m going to argue for) increased childcare subsidies to relieve that burden on families, to allow people and really especially women, because that’s the research that we’ve done, to be able to get back into the workforce or stay in the workforce if that’s what they want and not have the strain of the financial burden of childcare on them,” she said.

“Three days guaranteed would be the plan initially and that’s already been basically said now by the Labor Party anyway, but the next step would be the infrastructure and the workforce and that’s what we don’t seem to have and we believe that that’s then what’s driving prices up as well.

“We’re talking about expanding the workforce, expanding the infrastructure, so there is enough for everybody, the accessibility is greater and the cost is lower.”

Labor has pledged $1bn towards building 160 government-owned childcare centres, as well as scrapping the activity test that meant parents had to satisfy a work or study requirement to get access.

Ms Smolenski said she believed childcare should become a formalised part of the education system, sitting before prep.

‘Grind to a halt’: Edwards, Hamilton fire back at independents over hung parliament

Suzie Holt; Richard Edwards; Kirstie Smolenski.
Suzie Holt; Richard Edwards; Kirstie Smolenski.

Labor candidate for Groom Richard Edwards fired a broadside at both Suzie Holt and Kirstie Smolenski over their belief Groom would hold sway if it was independent in a hung parliament.

Mr Edwards, who has been campaigning hard in between his full-time job, said he was the only candidate on the ballot would be at the decision table if Anthony Albanese and Labor was returned to power for another three years.

He said the argument from Ms Holt and Ms Smolenski that Groom would enjoy more attention from Labor or the Coalition in a hung parliament ignores the fact that other electorates would be in a similar situation.

“Either independent, if they’re elected, could play a decisive role but we also need to bear in mind that there are many other independents in other electorates running,” Mr Edwards said.

“So even if Labor fell short by one seat, they would then have to compete with the Greens, they would have to compete with minor parties, they’d have to compete with other independents, which doesn’t necessarily mean our voice in the region would have a chance to be at that table.”

This assessment was matched by his LNP opponent and incumbent MP Garth Hamilton, who indicated he would prefer – after his ultimate desire of a Coalition majority – a Labor majority to any version of a hung parliament that would involve “midnight horse trading”.

“People like governments that make decisions and clear decisions — Labor’s presenting its vision for the future, we have our vision for the future, we seek a mandate to deliver that as do Labor,” he said.

“The 2010 minority, that government kicked out for a loss of 19 seats in 2013, and lots of people like to talk to me about how much was done in the Gillard era, and it was a lot of damage that was done.”

Hamilton pledges $250k to Hope Horizons

Groom MP Garth Hamilton, with Hope Horizon's Jo Capp and Opposition Leader Peter Dutton.
Groom MP Garth Hamilton, with Hope Horizon's Jo Capp and Opposition Leader Peter Dutton.

LNP incumbent Garth Hamilton has promised $250,000 of unrestricted funds for cancer care centre Hope Horizons if Peter Dutton is delivered as prime minister.

In a statement, Mr Hamilton said the funding could be used by the not-for-profit for anything they required as part of its mission to support residents battling cancer.

“For so many people in our community, Hope Horizons Inc has been a source of comfort, strength and hope,” he said.

“It’s the kind of care you can’t put a price on – and care that should never have to go without the resources it needs.

“That’s why a Dutton LNP Government will invest $250,000 to support vital upgrades and ease the pressure on day-to-day costs.”

Mr Hamilton said he wanted Labor to match the pledge, but the party’s Groom candidate Richard Edwards suggested that was unlikely.

Corflutes hit with swastikas, slurs as campaign turns nasty

Vandalism of corflutes, Toowoomba election.
Vandalism of corflutes, Toowoomba election.

Hundreds of Toowoomba election corflutes have been vandalised with swastikas and homophobic slurs over the weekend as part a slate of actions candidates have slammed as “abhorrent” and “horrendous”.

Both Labor’s Richard Edwards and independent Kirstie Smolenski reported a spate of defacements across Saturday, with the latter revealing one of her supporters was injured for stopping two young people vandalising his sign of a Nazi symbol.

For the full story, click here.

Huge turnout of early voting

Nearly one in 10 Groom voters have already locked in their ballots, following an extraordinary turnout at prepolling across Toowoomba’s four current early voting centres.

According to the Australian Electoral Commission, more than 11,400 votes out of Groom’s 118,700 enrolments have been cast across just three days this week.

The largest was the Harristown booth, which saw 1200 people cast their ballots across the three days.

On top of that, more than 22,000 people have requested a postal vote for Groom, with 971 returned so far.

The Highfields prepolling centre will open on Saturday, so assuming it processes about 1000 ballots daily for its six-day run, it means on current trends more than half of the electorate (53 per cent) might have voted before May 3.

It reflects major national trends towards early voting, essentially shortening the five-week campaign to just three.

Holt pledges changes to veterans benefits scheme

Independent Groom candidate Suzie Holt with retired Group Captain John Bushell.
Independent Groom candidate Suzie Holt with retired Group Captain John Bushell.

Independent Suzie Holt has revealed she will fight to fix what defence force veterans say are outdated elements of federal government scheme that is reportedly costing some participants thousands of dollars in retirement.

The Defence Force Retirement and Death Benefits Scheme, established in 1972 and closed in 1991, pays out a lump sum to retiring members of the Australian Defence Force upon retirement and an indexed pension that is based on their salary at the time.

Veterans repay the scheme in time through a reduction in that pension.

As many as 2000 veterans in Groom are impacted by the scheme, and Ms Holt said a number of locals told her the scheme was based on actuarial calculations from 1960, when the life expectancy of veterans was much shorter.

“The issue here is that veterans are having to continue to pay off something that they have finished paying off, in some cases many years ago,” she said.

“In the case of one of the veterans who brought this to my attention, he has paid an extra $40,000 after completing the payback of the original debt.

“He is seeking an amendment that sets a date when this unfair system will be fixed so that he and other veterans will no longer be required to continue paying back an already paid off debt.

“When elected, I will have amendments drafted to address this problem.”

According to the Department of Veterans Affairs website, 2019 reviews of the DFRDB found that changes to life expectancy factors would have undesirable side effects for other parts of the scheme.

“Changes to the life expectancy tables could leave most members worse off, as the other key element of the scheme, the commutation factor, would also need to be updated and this would likely affect the pension amount an individual receives,” the website said.

Hamilton tight-lipped on technical colleges promise

Incumbent Groom MP Garth Hamilton believes the Coalition’s election pledge of a network of technical colleges will fix deficiencies in the construction sector — but refused to indicate if one would be built here.

Mr Hamilton said the resurrection of the concept, which was first established under John Howard and mothballed by Kevin Rudd, would deliver more apprentices than state-run TAFEs.

“Both sides identify the challenge that we have around just getting the right people to come through and when we see the completion rates staying quite low (at TAFE), it’s a challenge for us,” he said on Wednesday.

“We put this option forward, I think what it strongly identifies is our need to provide that high skilled labour that is crucial across Australia right now.”

However, Mr Hamilton wouldn’t commit to whether Toowoomba would be one of the 12 locations getting one of the colleges.

“Look, we’ll be talking more about that coming into the second week of the election campaign and what that means for us locally,” he said.

Holt accused of ‘rewriting history’ on Voice

The Toowoomba Chamber of Commerce's Meet the Candidates forum for Groom at The Oaks Hotel. Independent Suzie Holt and LNP's Garth Hamilton.
The Toowoomba Chamber of Commerce's Meet the Candidates forum for Groom at The Oaks Hotel. Independent Suzie Holt and LNP's Garth Hamilton.

Independent Suzie Holt says she didn’t mislead voters on her position of the 2023 Indigenous Voice to Parliament campaign, after she appeared to be caught in contrary positions on the issue and her involvement.

When asked in an interview with Toowoomba Forward over her position at the time, Ms Holt said she didn’t participate in the referendum and declined to give her position.

But various social media posts unearthed by her opponent and incumbent Groom MP Garth Hamilton showed her supporting the Yes campaign.

Groom voted overwhelmingly against enshrining an Indigenous voice to parliament in the constitution, along with the rest of the state and the nation.

When asked by News Corp, Ms Holt said she played no active role in the Yes campaign and pointed to her appearance at a forum organised by Mr Hamilton featuring noted No advocate Senator Jacinta Nampijinpa Price.

“I’m going to just share with you that actually I remained very neutral during the time of the campaign — I was very clear that I felt the whole process had been divisive,” she said.

“I attended the Jacinta Price event and one event around the multicultural event to actually get a really good perspective.

“I listened to the community, and the community very clearly has said no and they didn’t feel that what they put forward at the time was the right path forward.”

But in a stinging rebuke, Mr Hamilton said Ms Holt had tried to “rewrite history”.

“This is someone who I know, reached out to (Liberal MP and Yes advocate) Julian Leeser via a letter and tried to invite him to come to Toowoomba to run a Yes forum,” he said.

“This is someone who repeatedly called on me to support the Yes campaign, repeatedly made statements in support of that campaign and yet then tried just this week to say that that wasn’t what happened.

“People might not agree with me, but I’ve made it my job to make sure that people know where I stand, and to try and rewrite history in this way shows utter contempt for the intelligence of the voter here.

“How can you trust anything that this person says?”

‘Been inundated’: Independent says Hamilton corflute tactic backfires

Corflutes by the LNP branding Suzie Holt a 'teal'. Source: Reddit
Corflutes by the LNP branding Suzie Holt a 'teal'. Source: Reddit

Groom independent Suzie Holt says she has seen an influx of new volunteers and fundraising following the release of a new series of LNP corflutes branding her a “teal”.

The new signage by sitting member Garth Hamilton, which displays the word TEAL and an arrow pointing to the right, have been positioned next to Ms Holt’s corflutes across Toowoomba since early voting opening on Tuesday.

Ms Holt said the move had drawn a negative response from a number of residents who then wanted to support her.

“He showed his hand – it means that they’re worried they don’t have the policies, they’re not actually listening to the community and the community is responding,” she said.

“Since they’ve gone up, we have been inundated with volunteers, inundated with donations, inundated with requests to help because people do not like it.

“People are tired of the political divisiveness and they have had a gutful.”

Ms Holt had also alleged the signs breached electoral rules, however the Australian Electoral Commission told News Corp it met all requirements and guidelines.

When asked about the value of the tactic and whether he thought Ms Holt could win the seat, Mr Hamilton said he wasn’t taking Groom for granted.

“Everyone who is fortunate enough to become a member should demonstrate their willingness to fight for the privilege of being representative of their electorate,” he said.

“What I think is the real issue is, is that the risk presented by the teal independents, particularly those supported by Climate 200, is that people maybe didn’t understand what it was I’d be supporting.

“I don’t think at the last election anyone thought that you’d see to support the Greens 73 per cent of the time.”

‘Dark void’: Young voters’ brutal assessment of Groom candidates

Toowoomba young voters Abby and Jamie outside the Annex during early voting.
Toowoomba young voters Abby and Jamie outside the Annex during early voting.

Thousands of Toowoomba residents are likely to have voted early by the end of this week, and some of their assessments on candidates have been brutal.

Young couple Jamie and Abby, who cast their ballots at the Annex early voting centre in the CBD on Tuesday, admitted they had donkey-voted despite having real concerns about housing.

“Honestly, for us, we’re late 20s, early 30s, and the whole thing has given us existential dread over property and the housing crisis,” Abby said.

“We actually donkey-voted for the first time — it’s been a tough one when we think that a lot of the candidacy here is just not very good.

“I think everyone around our age bracket is in a really dark void about any possible solution, even locally that’s going to happen.”

Local woman Sue said her top issue had motivated her to vote for independent Suzie Holt.

Key surprises in how-to-vote cards revealed

Several of the parties running in Groom have released their how-to-vote cards for the 2025 election — and it could have big implications for independent Suzie Holt if voters followed suit.

The LNP and One Nation have both preferenced Ms Holt second-last on their cards, which are suggestive literature for how those parties would like supporters to put their preferences.

Ms Holt, who polled fourth on the primary vote in 2022, enjoyed an extraordinary flow of preferences to finish second against incumbent Garth Hamilton.

This included 54 per cent of One Nation’s votes, which was worth nearly 10 per cent of the vote.

Family First has also preferenced Ms Holt second-last.

In another move that has implications, Labor’s Richard Edwards has preferenced fellow independent Kirstie Smolenski over Ms Holt.

Ms Smolenski finished 1100 votes behind Ms Holt in 2022.

Greens candidate Alyce Nelligan and Trumpet of Patriots’ Jamie Marr have both preference Ms Holt second and Ms Smolenski third.

Neither independent will release how-to-vote cards, in line with their policies from three years ago.

Readers should note how-to-vote cards are suggestive in nature and have no impact on how a ballot is calculated after preferences, which are only directed by the voter with the numbers they write in.

Windsor makes big case for Groom independent

He was once the centre of federal politics during the Gillard minority government, and now celebrated independent MP Tony Windsor believes Groom is well-placed if the next government can’t form a majority.

The former member for New England has endorsed Suzie Holt, who is hoping to unseat Garth Hamilton on May 3 and become Groom’s first federal independent since the 1930s.

This has included appearing at Ms Holt’s launch, where he said he spoke about his time acting as the balance of power between 2010 and 2013.

Independent candidate for Groom Suzie Holt with supporters at her April campaign launch.
Independent candidate for Groom Suzie Holt with supporters at her April campaign launch.

“History says, and if you look at the data, the marginal seats or those seats that are competitive at election time are paid attention to by both sides, not just the side that assumes that they have some sort of traditional ownership of the seat,” he said.

Suzie Holt with former independent Tony Windsor.
Suzie Holt with former independent Tony Windsor.

“I was able to achieve a new hospital for Tamworth, that had been on the books for some years but it never was really delivered.

“The base work had been done, all the budgeting and things had been done but no bricks had been laid.

“For many years, both sides of parliament in government in majority really ignored capital funding in relation to health and from a regional perspective.

“What Rob Oakeshott (fellow independent) and I were able to do was make sure that the money that was in the health and hospital fund over $2 billion, a substantial amount of money, was going to go to regional Australia and 135 regional health services received some funding out of that bucket – New England was one of them.”

On Ms Holt, Mr Windsor believed she had demonstrated the work ethic and networking skills to be an MP.

“I don’t think I’ve ever seen a political candidate that’s worked right through the three years, in what’s essentially been a campaign,” he said.

“I’ve rarely seen an individual who wants to help people in the manner that she does, and really the basis of our parliamentary system is that representatives are elected in various electorates and they all go off to Canberra to make decisions.”

Hamilton rejects ‘unequal share’ case

Lighthouse founders Emma Mactaggart and Emily MacManus with Groom MP Garth Hamilton.
Lighthouse founders Emma Mactaggart and Emily MacManus with Groom MP Garth Hamilton.

Groom MP Garth Hamilton has heavily rebuked the idea the region doesn’t get its “fair share” of funding, while also directly attacking independents Suzie Holt and Kirstie Smolenski in the process.

Mr Hamilton, who is fighting for a second full term in parliament, faces a fierce contest from the returning candidates, who have both argued an independent would secure more for the region than the major parties have.

“The region receives little in the way of federal government grants, there’s been no action on Inland Rail, the Toowoomba Railway Parkland has seen no movement forward in years and its funding is set to disappear,” Ms Holt said at a recent event.

When presented with this notion, Mr Hamilton argued the region’s incoming infrastructure pipeline suggested the opposite was true.

“There is $110bn in the infrastructure pipeline, so divide that by 151 seats, that should be $728m each,” he said.

“We’ve got $5bn in the next 10 years and we had $1.2bn in the Toowoomba Bypass alone, so that’s seven times the average.

“As soon as you put the scrutiny to it, all I see is us batting well above the average.”

Mr Hamilton claimed candidates like Ms Holt and Ms Smolenski were “talking down” the region.

“Tell me a city in Queensland that is better than Toowoomba, where you’d rather live? None have a better way of life and a better standard of living,” he said.

“If the idea (marginal seats always did better) was true, there would be marginal seats paved in gold.

“I wish these people would stop talking down this great city.

“What they’re doing is talking down the achievements of all the community groups and leaders that advocated for them.

“We’re saying this at a time when we did get an equestrian centre, and the Inland Rail is coming through.”

Mr Hamilton did endorse the Toowoomba Equestrian Centre’ inclusion in the 2032 Olympic Games, as did Ms Holt and Ms Smolenski.

LNP matches Labor pledge over Black Gully funding

Labor's candidate for Groom in 2025 Richard Edwards.
Labor's candidate for Groom in 2025 Richard Edwards.

A Labor promise to provide much-needed funding to a key parkland in Toowoomba has been matched by the LNP.

ALP candidate Richard Edwards on March 22 announced the Albanese government would fund $1.8m towards upgrades at the Black Gully Linear Reserve and Captain Cook Reserve, as part of his campaign launch with Senator Anthony Chisholm.

“Projects like this one are all part of our plan to improve the liveability of Australia’s regional centres by delivering public spaces the community can enjoy,” Senator Chisholm wrote at the time.

Incumbent Garth Hamilton has since matched the figure, meaning the project will be greenlit regardless of who forms government.

‘I’m not a teal’: Smolenski makes funding position clear

Groom federal election independent candidate Kirstie Smolenski.
Groom federal election independent candidate Kirstie Smolenski.

Second-time independent candidate Kirstie Smolenski says she is “not a teal”, taking aim at a “smear campaign” she says is trying to derail her bid for Groom.

The nurse and small business owner, who is self-funded along with community donations totalling about $10,000, is one of two independents alongside Suzie Holt vying for the previously-safe conservative seat.

But Ms Smolenski, who finished about 1100 votes behind Ms Holt three years ago, said she had been at pains to assure voters she had no involvement with Climate 200, a lobby group focused on action on climate change and investment in renewables.

“I’m copping a barrage of questions everywhere I go, on my social media and in person, ‘are you teal?’ — no I am not and it is interrupting the focus of my conversations,” she said.

“I want to be talking about what’s important, which is housing, which is transport, rail, cost of living, water security.

“I am not being backed by the teal group, I’m beholden to the people of Groom only, not a group or party and I work incredibly hard for my money.

“I find it nearly offensive, I did a 10-hour shift on Monday, so I could go to the (Chamber of Commerce) forum (last week).”

Ms Smolenski also slammed printed advertising by the LNP, which she said paints her as a teal.

“I wanna be talking about the issues but people are now being incredibly distracted about the smear campaign that the Liberal Party have put out into everyone’s letterboxes in the past few days and it’s affecting my campaign,” she said.

The material in question does not mention Ms Smolenski or Ms Holt by name.

Ms Smolenski said she had enjoyed doorknocking and campaigning across Toowoomba, arguing she was reaching parts of the city that had been ignored by the major parties.

“A lot more people are recognising me, who I am, what I stand for and they’re also in favour of having an independent member of parliament,” she said.

“They’re sick of the status quo – so many people that I speak to, they just want change.”

Ms Smolenski is running on a campaign of increasing regional housing supply (through a regional housing infrastructure fund) as well as advocating for passenger rail to Brisbane and reforms to campaign finance laws.

Greens candidate reveals housing woes

Speaking in Queens Park, Toowoomba, for the launch of local Greens campaigns for the 2025 federal election are (from left) Queensland Senator Larissa Waters, Groom candidate Alyce Nelligan and Maranoa candidate Elizabeth Johnston.
Speaking in Queens Park, Toowoomba, for the launch of local Greens campaigns for the 2025 federal election are (from left) Queensland Senator Larissa Waters, Groom candidate Alyce Nelligan and Maranoa candidate Elizabeth Johnston.

Greens candidate Alyce Nelligan knows how crippling Toowoomba’s housing crisis is considering her family are currently fighting to find a new place to live.

The local identity and disability advocate, who uses a wheelchair, has revealed the difficulties of trying to either rent or buy while juggling a federal campaign.

Ms Nelligan, who ran for the Greens in 2019 and achieved the party’s best result in the seat, revealed she and her family had been told to find a new house due to their landlord selling.

It comes as both major parties and local candidates pitch solutions to the city’s shortage of housing, with vacancy rate sitting at just 0.6 per cent.

Speaking at her launch last week, Ms Nelligan said the existing struggles were made worse for people with disabilities.

“We’ve got a housing crisis here on the Darling Downs, we have young families like mine vying for rentals when there’s 27 other families trying to get that same house,” she said.

“We’re applying for 50 houses just to be able to find a home.

“So you can imagine with the one per cent vacancy rate, which is what we have in the Darling Downs, how many houses are accessible? It’s hardly any.

“About 95 per cent of all housing stock in Australia is not accessible in any way and so we are really at a crisis, especially for the disabled community to be able to just find a home.”

Ms Nelligan also placed Medicare expansion, major reforms to the NDIS and easing cost-of-living pressures as part of her key priorities.

Hamilton pledges funding for headstone project

Incumbent Garth Hamilton said the LNP has pledged $100,000 towards improving security at the Drayton and Toowoomba Cemetery, in a wake of a shocking vandalism incident last year.

Mr Hamilton said the money from the Safer Communities Fund would go towards new CCTV.

The disgraceful acts of vandalism that occurred last year resulted in damage to memorials and monuments was despicable, and it caused great anguish in our community, but particularly for the impacted families,” he said in a release.

The restoration of the more than 100 headstones damaged, the cost of which was more than $500,000, is currently being organised by community members.

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Original URL: https://www.thechronicle.com.au/news/toowoomba/groom-votes-toowoomba-candidates-meet-with-voters-as-campaign-reaches-last-two-weeks-to-may-3-federal-election/news-story/5432f8f821ab59921a487ad0e1b50cbf