Eight Labor ‘climate champions’ to get election help from party’s grassroots environment action group
Labor’s grassroots environmental action network is mobilising behind pro-nature MPs it wants in federal parliament to push the party to adopt a more ambitious green agenda.Labor Environment Action Network (LEAN) will support a select group of eight Labor “climate and environmental champions” at the federal election, actively promoting their green credentials to voters and helping with door-knocking and other grassroots campaigning.The list of MPs includes Ged Kearney, Kate Thwaites and Josh Burns in Victoria, Jerome Laxale and Sally Sitou in New South Wales, Alicia Payne in the ACT and Josh Wilson in Western Australia.The group will also support Renee Coffey, who is contesting the Greens-held seat of Griffith in Queensland.LEAN is the largest member-based group inside Labor, with roughly 5,000 supporters nationwide, making it a formidable campaigning force if it can be fully harnessed.The unusual decision to publicly endorse select candidates comes after LEAN was left devastated when the prime minister, Anthony Albanese, twice intervened to mothball legislation to create a federal environmental protection agency.The federal EPA was a 2022 Labor election promise, a commitment born from LEAN’s years-long internal campaign for a national nature watchdog.After Albanese spiked a potential deal in November amid lobbying from miners and the WA premier, Roger Cook, the network’s national co-convener, Felicity Wade, said “vested interests won”.The environment minister, Tanya Plibersek, and Labor backbenchers attempted to revive the proposal over summer before the prime minister intervened again, pushing it off the agenda until after the election.The future of the federal EPA and Labor’s broader nature positive plan to overhaul federal environmental protection laws was unclear.Wade said the pro-nature MPs were needed inside Labor caucus to push the case for change.See how Australia's new voting maps mean entire electorates are disappearing – video“Quite simply, the parliament needs these people,” Wade said. “Minor parties and independents have an important role in creating change. They can shift the goalposts on debates and improve legislation.“But it’s the major parties, those who form governments, that define the agenda. Everyone has their role, but it is essential, in the context of a busy government agenda, that we have strong voices in the Labor caucus – and these guys are it.”skip past newsletter promotionSign up to Breaking News AustraliaGet the most important news as it breaksPrivacy Notice: Newsletters may contain info about charities, online ads, and content funded by outside parties. For more information see our Privacy Policy. We use Google reCaptcha to protect our website and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.after newsletter promotionLEAN members will conduct door-knocking, phone banking and push ads on social media to promote the chosen “champions”.The group will raise funds from supporters to back the effort but won’t directly donate to the candidates.The on-the-ground campaigning is expected to focus on Laxale’s seat of Bennelong, Payne’s seat of Canberra and Coffey’s bid for Griffith.The reinforcements from LEAN could be crucial for Laxale in particular, whose north Sydney is now nominally Liberal (0.04% margin) after a boundary redistribution.The redrawn seat also now takes in suburbs such as Lane Cove and Greenwich, which swung heavily behind the climate-focused independent Kylea Tink at the 2022 election.Asked if he would push Labor to revive the nature positive plan if re-elected, Laxale told Guardian Australian: “This is Labor policy. I want to make sure that a Labor government enacts Labor policy.“We’ve got a 2035 (emissions reduction target) that we need to set. We’ve got the rest of the EPBC reforms that we need to settle on.“And I want to be one of the many MPs in there who are passionate about this stuff and make them as good as they can be.”The Greens will highlight Labor’s failure to deliver its promised environmental laws in an attempt to turn nature into a battleground election issue.
Exclusive: Ged Kearney, Kate Thwaites, Josh Burns, Jerome Laxale, Sally Sitou, Alicia Payne, Josh Wilson and Renee Coffey will get extra door-knocking, phone banking and push adsGet our breaking news email, free app or daily news podcastLabor’s grassroots environmental action network is mobilising behind pro-nature MPs it wants in federal parliament to push the party to adopt a more ambitious green agenda.Labor Environment Action Network (LEAN) will support a select group of eight Labor “climate and environmental champions” at the federal election, actively promoting their green credentials to voters and helping with door-knocking and other grassroots campaigning.Sign up for Guardian Australia’s breaking news email Continue reading...
Labor’s grassroots environmental action network is mobilising behind pro-nature MPs it wants in federal parliament to push the party to adopt a more ambitious green agenda.
Labor Environment Action Network (LEAN) will support a select group of eight Labor “climate and environmental champions” at the federal election, actively promoting their green credentials to voters and helping with door-knocking and other grassroots campaigning.
The list of MPs includes Ged Kearney, Kate Thwaites and Josh Burns in Victoria, Jerome Laxale and Sally Sitou in New South Wales, Alicia Payne in the ACT and Josh Wilson in Western Australia.
The group will also support Renee Coffey, who is contesting the Greens-held seat of Griffith in Queensland.
LEAN is the largest member-based group inside Labor, with roughly 5,000 supporters nationwide, making it a formidable campaigning force if it can be fully harnessed.
The unusual decision to publicly endorse select candidates comes after LEAN was left devastated when the prime minister, Anthony Albanese, twice intervened to mothball legislation to create a federal environmental protection agency.
The federal EPA was a 2022 Labor election promise, a commitment born from LEAN’s years-long internal campaign for a national nature watchdog.
After Albanese spiked a potential deal in November amid lobbying from miners and the WA premier, Roger Cook, the network’s national co-convener, Felicity Wade, said “vested interests won”.
The environment minister, Tanya Plibersek, and Labor backbenchers attempted to revive the proposal over summer before the prime minister intervened again, pushing it off the agenda until after the election.
The future of the federal EPA and Labor’s broader nature positive plan to overhaul federal environmental protection laws was unclear.
Wade said the pro-nature MPs were needed inside Labor caucus to push the case for change.
“Quite simply, the parliament needs these people,” Wade said. “Minor parties and independents have an important role in creating change. They can shift the goalposts on debates and improve legislation.
“But it’s the major parties, those who form governments, that define the agenda. Everyone has their role, but it is essential, in the context of a busy government agenda, that we have strong voices in the Labor caucus – and these guys are it.”
after newsletter promotion
LEAN members will conduct door-knocking, phone banking and push ads on social media to promote the chosen “champions”.
The group will raise funds from supporters to back the effort but won’t directly donate to the candidates.
The on-the-ground campaigning is expected to focus on Laxale’s seat of Bennelong, Payne’s seat of Canberra and Coffey’s bid for Griffith.
The reinforcements from LEAN could be crucial for Laxale in particular, whose north Sydney is now nominally Liberal (0.04% margin) after a boundary redistribution.
The redrawn seat also now takes in suburbs such as Lane Cove and Greenwich, which swung heavily behind the climate-focused independent Kylea Tink at the 2022 election.
Asked if he would push Labor to revive the nature positive plan if re-elected, Laxale told Guardian Australian: “This is Labor policy. I want to make sure that a Labor government enacts Labor policy.
“We’ve got a 2035 (emissions reduction target) that we need to set. We’ve got the rest of the EPBC reforms that we need to settle on.
“And I want to be one of the many MPs in there who are passionate about this stuff and make them as good as they can be.”
The Greens will highlight Labor’s failure to deliver its promised environmental laws in an attempt to turn nature into a battleground election issue.