
2025 Federal election: Durack candidates have their final say ahead of polls on Saturday
Here's what they had to say on why they deserve your vote, in order of how they appear on the ballot.
Melissa Price (Liberal)
I've had the privilege of representing Durack since 2013. Over the past 12 years, I've worked hard to deliver the infrastructure and services our vast electorate deserves — better roads, mobile coverage, NBN upgrades, and support for local mining and council projects.
I am proud of the Liberal Party's strong commitment to mental health, including new headspace centres across Durack, which are making a real difference for young people and families.
One of my proudest achievements is helping establish the Pilbara Kimberley University Centre, which is transforming access to regional education and workforce development.
My team and I have helped thousands of constituents resolve complex issues with Centrelink, the NDIS, veterans services and immigration. We live here, we understand the challenges, and we care deeply about the people we serve.
This Saturday, I ask for your support to continue delivering for Durack with experience, energy and determination and a Liberal government ready to get Australia back on track.
Kat Wright (Legalise Cannabis)
Lisa Simpson once said: 'The whole damn system is wrong.' And let's be honest — she's right.
In Durack and across regional Australia, people are doing it tough while the same old systems protect the few and leave the rest of us behind. Whether it's housing, jobs, farming, or climate — what we have isn't working. It's time for a reset.
That's why I'm running for the Legalise Cannabis Party — not just to legalise hemp, but to use it to build something better. Hemp can power real, grassroots reform: affordable housing made from hempcrete, jobs in regional processing, regenerative farming that heals our land, and a circular economy where waste becomes opportunity.
This isn't a pipedream — it's a practical, profitable and sustainable path forward that starts right here in Durack.
Martin Luther King Jr warned us against political apathy when he said: 'If you fail to act now, history will have to record that the greatest tragedy of this period of social transition was not the strident clammer of the bad people but the appalling silence of the good people.'
I won't be silent. I will stand up because our system needs fixing.
Together we can overGROW the government.
Bailey Kempton (Nationals)
During the aftermath of cyclone Seroja, I witnessed the neglect that regional people face even during crises. In Durack, we work hard, and we love where we live, but we get only a fraction back of what we contribute to the nation's economy. We're being let down by the Government, and we need a different approach.
We deserve access to quality health care, education and to travel on well-maintained roads. It's clear that families are struggling with the cost of living and need real action that will help their back pocket now, not in 15 months. By halving fuel excise, we will provide immediate relief to those who need it most.
I decided to run for politics after becoming tired of watching these issues persist without change. The current Government seems unconcerned about the opinions of Australians, especially those outside the city. This is confirmed through recent remarks by a senior Labor member about the Voice being inevitable, despite the referendum result.
My campaign has been about stepping up, engaging with the community, hearing your concerns and offering a different choice. Durack needs someone with common sense who won't back down in the fight because where we live is worth fighting for.
Mark Berry (One Nation)
Durack stands at a crossroads. We can stick with the same failed policies that have made life harder, or we can choose a new path —one that puts everyday Australians first.
For too long, both major parties have put ideology ahead of common sense. They've driven up the cost of living, neglected essential services and allowed our freedoms to erode. That must end.
As your One Nation candidate, I won't make empty promises. I will fight to reduce the tax burden on working Australians and eliminate billions in government waste. I stand for real reform — not more bureaucracy.
Freedom of speech must be protected. It's a cornerstone of our democracy, and I will work to enshrine it in our Constitution. The major parties won't defend this right — but I will.
As a proud Australian Army veteran, I served this country to protect our values. I won't stand by while they're stripped away.
This election is about reclaiming our voice, restoring our freedoms and building a fairer future for all Australians. With your support and trust, we can lead that change — together.
Jason Hunter (Indigenous — Aboriginal Party of Australia)
As a Nykina man, I'm running to finally put First Nations voices at the heart of Durack's future.
For too long, our communities have been sidelined while politicians treat Indigenous issues as political wedges.
My first priority is protecting the Martuwarra (Fitzroy River) and all our precious waterways from fracking and over-extraction, respecting 60,000 years of Indigenous water stewardship that major parties continue to ignore.
The cost-of-living crisis demands more than temporary rebates. I'll fight to break the Coles/Woolworths duopoly through enforced ACCC reforms and invest in regional food security projects to actually lower prices at the checkout. Unlike the majors who protect mining profits, I'll make corporations pay their fair share to fund lasting solutions.
On housing, I'll push to tax vacant properties, cap investor tax perks, and expand safe caravan park spaces for those struggling to find homes. For health care, we'll clean contaminated water supplies and replace punitive approaches with proper mental health support and preventative care focused on nutrition and healthy living.
Durack deserves an economy beyond mining booms. I'll champion sustainable industries like hemp and renewables, fight to keep rural hospitals open, and create Indigenous-led housing and education programs with real job pathways.
Healing country begins when traditional knowledge guides decision-making. After generations of empty promises, I'll bring that change to Canberra.
Maarten Kornaat (Trumpet of Patriots)
Putting Australians First.
I will fight to ease the cost of living by introducing a 15 per cent iron ore mining levy, with proceeds used to reduce national debt and raise the tax-free income threshold. Education must be a right, not a burden — university will be free for Australian citizens, and all HECS debts will be forgiven.
Government waste will be addressed through a full audit, with spending redirected to benefit Australian citizens and interests.
I will fight to restore freedom by reducing government overreach, eliminating red tape, and empowering individuals and small businesses, especially in regional areas. Farmers must be free to farm, and doctors free to heal patients without interference.
A royal commission into the government's COVID-19 response will be launched to identify failings, ensure accountability and learnings will be implemented to protect our rights.
Australia's sovereignty comes first. I will review all international memberships, including with the WEF (World Economic Forum) and WHO, to ensure they align with national interests. All public-private partnerships will be audited to guarantee they serve the Australian people — not foreign or corporate agendas.
I will be listening to and addressing the concerns of the people of Durack.
Let's shape the future of Australia together!
Karen Wheatland (Labor)
I'm running because Durack deserves better — better health care, better jobs and a future our kids can actually afford.
Real change doesn't happen from the sidelines. It happens when you're in the room, helping to make the decisions that matter.
Voting Labor is the best way to get things done — on cost of living, climate, housing, health care — all the everyday big stuff.
The Albanese Labor Government has a real plan to deliver cost-of-living relief, build more things right here, and make housing more accessible.
Labor's already delivering — from Medicare Urgent Care Clinics to major road upgrades — and I want to keep Durack moving forward, not backwards under Peter Dutton.
I've lived the life so many in Durack are living right now. I've worked the boats, raised my kids on my own, and fought hard to survive each day.
I know what it's like to be stretched, doing your best, and still turning up. That's the kind of representative I'll be — someone who shows up, fights smart, and never forgets where they came from.
Durack deserves someone who gets it. I do. And I'm ready to get to work.
Brendan Sturcke (Greens)
Durack is a remarkable electorate, my time as a farmhand and in the mining industry has created deep ties with the area and I'm excited to be able to offer people the opportunity to vote for real change.
We know farmers and fishers are some of the most affected by the climate crisis and supermarket price gouging, which is why we're pushing for stronger climate action and strengthening protections like making the Food and Grocery Code of Conduct mandatory.
As I've travelled across the electorate, the overwhelming feedback I've been receiving is people are feeling abandoned by the Government.
We know local communities have the answers to the problems they're facing, we need to be listening and working with people on the ground to find meaningful solutions.
Now isn't the time to be tinkering around the edges, the majority of people are struggling with housing, cost of living, and health and the Government must act.
The Greens are the only party taking real action on the climate and cost-of-living crises.
This election is a pivotal moment in history, not only for the planet but also the people of Durack. Nothing changes if you don't vote for it.
Australian Christians candidate Eugenie Harris did not respond to the Geraldton Guardian's request for comment.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

The Australian
2 hours ago
- The Australian
Advance Australia labels Basil Zempilas a ‘loser' over net zero, welcome to country positions
West Australian Liberal leader Basil Zempilas has been labelled a 'loser' by lobby group Advance Australia after the former media personality distanced himself from party motions opposing net zero and Indigenous symbolism. Advance – a conservative body best known for its strong opposition to the Indigenous voice referendum and which campaigned aggressively against Labor in the lead-up to the federal election – launched its attack on Mr Zempilas on Tuesday, while signalling it would also go after other Coalition MPs who did not embrace its positions. In a statement to The Australian, Advance executive director Matthew Sheahan said Mr Zempilas had made 'a big mistake on the weekend by selling out battling Aussies instead of voting to dump net zero'. 'Instead of standing with WA families, he chose to support an energy policy that will destroy his state's economic prosperity,' Mr Sheahan said. 'If Basil Zempilas thinks hiking power bills and taking land off farmers is an election winner, he may as well quit now.' Motions calling on the Sussan Ley-led federal opposition to abandon net zero, ditch welcome to country ceremonies and limit official flag recognition to the national, state and territory flags were overwhelmingly supported by members at a meeting of the WA Liberal Party's state council on Saturday. The net zero motion had been publicly backed by senior Liberal MP Andrew Hastie, while Michaelia Cash – the most senior federal Liberal MP from WA and the party's leader in the Senate – had endorsed the motions on welcome to country ceremonies and the flag. All three motions, while non-binding, were seen as putting pressure on Ms Ley, who has tried to avoid 'culture war' issues since narrowly securing the party leadership in the wake of Peter Dutton's defeat. Mr Zempilas on Monday said the parliamentary arm of the WA Liberal Party continued to support the status quo on all three issues, and that he was 'very comfortable' with both welcome to country ceremonies and standing in front of the Aboriginal flag. The comments prompted Advance to attack Mr Zempilas on social media, contrasting his position with those of Mr Hastie and Senator Cash. 'While Andrew Hastie and Michaelia Cash head in the right direction by opposing Net Zero, Welcomes to Country and dividing our country with multiple flags, the West Australia Liberal leader Basil Zempilas has decided he wants to be a loser,' Advance said on its Facebook page. Advance has typically been seen as a strongly pro-Coalition lobby group, although it was a vocal critic of NSW then-Liberal treasurer Matt Kean and his climate policies. Mr Sheahan said Advance was not afraid of calling out Liberal and National MPs. 'This is a warning for weak Coalition politicians, Advance will not stand by while you betray mainstream Australians,' he said. Mr Zempilas, a former Channel 7 commentator and media personality, became WA Liberal leader despite having no parliamentary experience following his party's emphatic defeat at the March state election. He was one of only a handful of Liberal candidates to win seats at the election, with his party now holding only seven of 59 lower house seats. He secured the leadership after his parliamentary colleagues made it clear they would no longer support his predecessor Libby Mettam. Several of those MPs who supported Mr Zempilas's rise to the leadership are also understood to support the motions opposing net zero and Indigenous symbolism. Mr Zempilas declined to respond to Advance's comments. Paul Garvey Senior Reporter Paul Garvey is an award-winning journalist with more than two decades' experience in newsrooms around Australia and the world. He is currently the senior reporter in The Australian's WA bureau, covering politics, courts, billionaires and everything in between. He has previously written for The Wall Street Journal in New York, The Australian Financial Review in Melbourne, and for The Australian from Hong Kong before returning to his native Perth. He was the WA Journalist of the Year in 2024 and is a two-time winner of The Beck Prize for political journalism. Education Australia's $90bn education system faces a stark reality check as NAPLAN results show students from poor families and regional schools are falling further behind top-performing students in the cities. Politics Communications Minister Anika Wells will announce YouTube's inclusion in Labor's social media ban for under-16s, reversing a prior exemption and paving the platform to threaten a High Court challenge.

The Age
2 hours ago
- The Age
Deb's 25 years of administration experience proved no match for WA's firearms portal
Taylor's video took off, and she now spends hours each week helping people use the portal. She knows how serious it is if someone is unable to use their firearm if needed. She works some days between 5am and 1pm to help those who need it, including many who struggle with technology. 'Two weeks ago, a woman rang me up … and I knew straight away something was going on,' Taylor said. 'She goes, 'I've found your number and I really need your help. I've just lost my husband and I need to put him to rest … but I need [to renew my son's licences]'. Loading 'I said, 'Sweetheart, please'. I said, 'You need to take care of your husband first, and when you're ready, you come back to me and I'll get you through this'. 'These are the people that are coming to me every day and I'm not going to rest until everyone's taken care of.' User issues with the portal were flagged by farmers, pastoralists and recreational shooters as far back as May, and recent data breach of the portal again shook their faith in the system earlier this month. Deb is just one of the many lay West Australians helping neighbours work out the new system. Warwick D'Silva works as a research policy officer for Phil Twiss, a member of WA's Liberal party, but he grew up in the bush. 'I could be sitting there at a point where I suddenly now have unlicensed firearms – and it's from no fault of my own.' Pastoralist Jack Carmody D'Silva sat with his 80-year-old father to work through the new system. 'I consider myself relatively computer-literate, but ... it's quite confusing,' he said. D'Silva said his father wanted to register his firearms so he could keep shooting with his friends at a local club. But he said it proved too difficult for some of his dad's elderly friends. 'I know one friend who he just couldn't be bothered with working it out the portal, so he just gave everything up,' D'Silva said. Pastoralist Jack Carmody runs his own business in the Esperance region, and was a previous Shooters Fishers and Farmers WA party candidate. 'It's almost as if it's designed to be deliberately difficult,' he said. 'Firearms are absolutely critical to the [farming] operation. 'There's nothing worse than coming across a one of your livestock that's been injured, and a memory that's burnt into my mind is a wild dog that had a weaner (juvenile) bull dropped on the deck. '[The bull] was disabled, and it was getting eaten alive … we had to put the poor little bull down.' Carmody said he had spent months being bounced between different customer service agents who had at times just stopped answering his queries. 'My licence expires towards the end of next month, and as far as I am aware, all I have to do is pay my licence renewal,' he said. 'But I don't know how to pay that, and I can't get hold of anyone. 'I could be sitting there at a point where I suddenly now have unlicensed firearms – and it's from no fault of my own.' In response to questions from this masthead, Police Minister Reece Whitby thanked people for their help identifying problems with the new system. 'With such a significant change to a system that is more than 50 years old there are sometimes going to be issues that are required to be addressed,' he said. Whitby said an issue regarding unauthorised access to the portal which arose earlier in July was 'quickly addressed' by WA's police commissioner, who denied it was a 'data breach' as characterised in news reports and by the WA Nationals. 'We will continue to work with the thousands of responsible gun owners who have already committed or are in the process of being part of the new licensing system,' Whitby said, noting WA Police had a dedicated servicing team to help gun owners transition to the new system.

Sydney Morning Herald
2 hours ago
- Sydney Morning Herald
Deb's 25 years of administration experience proved no match for WA's firearms portal
Taylor's video took off, and she now spends hours each week helping people use the portal. She knows how serious it is if someone is unable to use their firearm if needed. She works some days between 5am and 1pm to help those who need it, including many who struggle with technology. 'Two weeks ago, a woman rang me up … and I knew straight away something was going on,' Taylor said. 'She goes, 'I've found your number and I really need your help. I've just lost my husband and I need to put him to rest … but I need [to renew my son's licences]'. Loading 'I said, 'Sweetheart, please'. I said, 'You need to take care of your husband first, and when you're ready, you come back to me and I'll get you through this'. 'These are the people that are coming to me every day and I'm not going to rest until everyone's taken care of.' User issues with the portal were flagged by farmers, pastoralists and recreational shooters as far back as May, and recent data breach of the portal again shook their faith in the system earlier this month. Deb is just one of the many lay West Australians helping neighbours work out the new system. Warwick D'Silva works as a research policy officer for Phil Twiss, a member of WA's Liberal party, but he grew up in the bush. 'I could be sitting there at a point where I suddenly now have unlicensed firearms – and it's from no fault of my own.' Pastoralist Jack Carmody D'Silva sat with his 80-year-old father to work through the new system. 'I consider myself relatively computer-literate, but ... it's quite confusing,' he said. D'Silva said his father wanted to register his firearms so he could keep shooting with his friends at a local club. But he said it proved too difficult for some of his dad's elderly friends. 'I know one friend who he just couldn't be bothered with working it out the portal, so he just gave everything up,' D'Silva said. Pastoralist Jack Carmody runs his own business in the Esperance region, and was a previous Shooters Fishers and Farmers WA party candidate. 'It's almost as if it's designed to be deliberately difficult,' he said. 'Firearms are absolutely critical to the [farming] operation. 'There's nothing worse than coming across a one of your livestock that's been injured, and a memory that's burnt into my mind is a wild dog that had a weaner (juvenile) bull dropped on the deck. '[The bull] was disabled, and it was getting eaten alive … we had to put the poor little bull down.' Carmody said he had spent months being bounced between different customer service agents who had at times just stopped answering his queries. 'My licence expires towards the end of next month, and as far as I am aware, all I have to do is pay my licence renewal,' he said. 'But I don't know how to pay that, and I can't get hold of anyone. 'I could be sitting there at a point where I suddenly now have unlicensed firearms – and it's from no fault of my own.' In response to questions from this masthead, Police Minister Reece Whitby thanked people for their help identifying problems with the new system. 'With such a significant change to a system that is more than 50 years old there are sometimes going to be issues that are required to be addressed,' he said. Whitby said an issue regarding unauthorised access to the portal which arose earlier in July was 'quickly addressed' by WA's police commissioner, who denied it was a 'data breach' as characterised in news reports and by the WA Nationals. 'We will continue to work with the thousands of responsible gun owners who have already committed or are in the process of being part of the new licensing system,' Whitby said, noting WA Police had a dedicated servicing team to help gun owners transition to the new system.