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The New Daily
The New Daily
National
Luke Costin

Premier Dominic Perrottet spurns federal Liberals’ involvement in NSW election campaign

The polls say Labor's Chris Minns is leading Dominic Perrottet and widely tipped to lead a minority government. Photo: AAP

The sole Liberal leading a mainland state government won’t rely on federal MPs as he campaigns to keep NSW moving forward beyond the March election.

NSW Premier Dominic Perrottet will head into Sydney’s southwestern suburbs for the Liberal Party’s official campaign launch on Sunday.

The area will be decisive in who wins the March 25 election, with the notionally Labor seat of Leppington and the Liberals’ Holsworthy both on small margins.

The election also provides voters an opportunity to send a message to local MPs and the government after suffering some of the harshest COVID-19 lockdown restrictions.

While key ministerial allies will help Mr Perrottet rally party faithful under the banner “Keep NSW moving forward”, federal Opposition Leader Peter Dutton and other federal MPs will be notably absent from Sunday’s event.

The Premier has gambled his election chances on mega transport projects through the west, support for small businesses and energy bill relief to households.

He’s increasingly leaning on the long-held Liberal Party messaging of being better economic managers as voters grapple with cost of living pressures and a rental crisis pushing some to the brink.

Recent political polls suggest a tight race, with a Labor minority government the most likely result.

Slimmest of margins

A decisive seat is Holsworthy, held by the Liberals on a six per cent margin, where sitting MP Melanie Gibbons was dumped at preselection. In her place is Tina Ayyad, a former deputy mayor and the wife of Liverpool Mayor Ned Mannoun.

The Liberals would also need to retain East Hills (0.1 per cent margin) and regain the southern Sydney electorate of Heathcote (notionally Labor) to keep its grip on government.

The Liberals are the last of the lower house parties to launch their campaign.

Labor on Sunday announced a plan to ease the cost of rising electricity bills for small businesses and NSW families and households under a proposed $485 million Energy Relief Fund.

Under the plan eligible NSW small businesses will receive $315 off their energy bill and when matched by funding from the Commonwealth government’s rebate scheme around 320,000 small businesses will get $630 off their bills.

The fund would also mean NSW households hit hard by energy price rises would receive $250 off their energy bill and when matched with $250 from the Commonwealth’s Energy Bill Relief Fund, around 1.6 million eligible households will get $500 off their bills.

“Labor’s plan gets the balance right between short term, targeted relief and long term reform to fix the energy crisis. And under Labor there will be no more privatisation,” Labor leader Chris Minns said in a statement.

The Greens on Saturday outlined their demands if Labor needs their support to form government.

Federal Greens leader Adam Bandt endorsed a pledge to scrap the proposed Narrabri Gas Project and related pipeline through the Hunter.

The project is on track to be completed in 2026 and is projected to eventually supply half of NSW’s gas.

What the Greens’ demand

“We cannot afford new coal and gas. It’s deadly, it’s dangerous and it will cost us the earth,” federal Greens leader Adam Bandt told the party faithful in Sydney.

Labor dismissed talk of minority government, focusing on winning the required 47 seats to rule in their own right.

“The only way to guarantee a change of government … is to vote for a Labor candidate on the 25th of March,” Mr Minns said on Saturday.

With redistributions and resignations, the coalition has claims on 45 seats, Labor 38, the Greens three and independents seven in the 93-seat lower house.

Some 562 candidates are running in the lower house, with a candidate from Labor, the Greens and either the Nationals or the Liberals in every seat.

The Nationals and Liberals will face off in independent-held Wagga Wagga and Port Macquarie, held by National-turned-Liberal Leslie Williams.

-AAP

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