There was something appropriately bleak and comic about yesterday’s leadership change for the Liberal Party in Western Australia, the fifth since Colin Barnett bowed out in 2017.
David Honey pulled out of the vote, leaving Libby Mettam as not only the only other leadership candidate, but the only other lower house MP for the party in the state.
As we’ve long chronicled, the WA Libs achieve a level of tragi-comic dysfunction that would have Todd Solondz wincing and looking away. Honey took over from Zak Kirkup after the party was reduced to two lower house MPs in the Mark McGowan massacre of March 2021.
Let’s look back at one of the saddest (and quietest) reigns in Australian political history.
‘The Clan’
References to a “clan” very rarely give the impression of anything benevolent, and the WA Libs’ version is no different. “The Clan” — which had included former federal finance minister Mathias Cormann — was organised particularly around state Liberal MP Nick Goiran. It was Goiran who threatened to sue over an internal review which described its members of “odious” behaviour. The party eventually backed down.
By this stage about 700 pages of WhatsApp messages between Clan members (leaked in 2021 and covering the the previous five years) were already in the public domain. The messages detail alleged branch stacking and the manoeuvres that delivered their members to key office positions. It also featured a bunch of misogynistic language. Upper house MP Peter Collier referred to female colleagues with phrases like “prize bitch” and “toxic cow”.
Yesterday, a mere 18 months later, he issued an apology noting he was yet to make any comment but decided “given the ongoing commentary” about the messages he would. “I have expressed my apology to the WA Liberal Party Leader, Libby Mettam, and I also sincerely apologise to Liberal Party members, and the people of Western Australia for the inappropriate language that I used on several occasions,” he said.
Another member of the Clan, Ian Goodenough — the only federal Liberal still in a metropolitan seat post-May 2022 — claimed in Parliament that texts depicting him threatening to quit the party were fakes.
Devastation at state and federal level
While this is hardly Honey’s fault, the colossal wipeout in 2021 led to an internal party review so searing that it lead to defamation threats and had a huge impact on the 2022 election campaign: it wiped out the party’s grassroots infrastructure, reducing the electorate offices and staff around which volunteer efforts could be coordinated.
Indeed, Western Australia, traditionally a Liberal stronghold at federal level, swung violently against the party in 2022. The Libs lost four seats to Labor and one to independent Kate Chaney.
Jumping ship
In October 2022, the same week Honey polled at a 9% approval rating, state president Richard Wilson resigned after only 13 months in the role, and a mere three months after his reelection. In his farewell email, which found its way into the hands of the The West Australian, Wilson took aim at those in the party he accused of fostering “disunity” and public score-settling, saying “toxic self-interest” in the party was trumping “any deep-seated commitment to liberalism”.
A rough start
Honey’s public commentary on The Clan — transparently the biggest issue facing the Western Australian Liberal Party — was conspicuous in that it didn’t appear to exist. In fact, what’s most striking about The West Australian‘s coverage of the relentless scandals is how many pieces on the Liberal Party don’t mention Honey even once. When Honey did feature, it was invariably via editorials that argued it was time for him — “decent” and “not unintelligent” though he is — to go.
So it’s striking that Mettam’s first move is to go after The Clan, announcing that factional politics has been an “unfortunate and unedifying spectacle” for the WA Liberals and attempting to strip Goiran of his role as the party’s parliamentary secretary. That move failed to gain majority support, giving the distinct impression that the internal disputes are a long way from a quiet resolution.
Long may they continue to argue about who pilots the Titanic rather than seeing the iceberg.
David Honey more sightings of the nannup tiger! We voted out the clan’s religious nuppies state and federal, but the likes of Gorian and Collier
still pulling the strings untilThe libs get rid of the cancerous evanglical and pentecostals they will be in the wilderness with the tiger
The WA Libs are an absolute rabble.
Western Australians are generally quite conservative, but we will not elect any more right wing religious nutjobs. Of any flavour.
Goiran was positively grinning from ear to ear yesterday on the parliament steps after his acolytes first elected Mettam, and then voted against her express proposal to remove Goiran. Nothing has changed, and nothing will until the religious reactionaries are chucked out. And to hear another of the liberals demanding they be elevated to the official opposition yesterday because, well, um, because they’re the Liberal Party! More than a tin ear. They thoroughly deserve the purgatory in which they have put themselves. And that is not a good thing for the state of democracy in WA.
Whenever Crikey mentions the WA Libs and Collier in particular I always go back and reference these past articles:
https://uat.crikey.com.au/2002/09/11/the-wild-west-turns-up-wonderful-sagas/ – Collier and Signatures. Dumping good sitting members.
https://uat.crikey.com.au/2008/06/17/tips-and-rumours/ – Dumping sitting members
https://uat.crikey.com.au/2005/09/30/knives-should-be-drawn-at-wa-libs-state-conference/ – Collier and Signatures again.
Seems that Crikey had the number of the Clan Clowns well before they started wreaking the havoc that has ruined the party.