
‘Awful, Miserable' Workplace: Departing Greens MP Claims He's Pleased to Leave Parliament
But Chandler-Mather says he's far from upset to be leaving Parliament, which he describes as a 'sick place.'
'I'll be honest, one of the things I'm quite happy about at the moment is I don't have to spend more time in the House of Representatives, because basically every time I stood up, I got screamed and yelled at,' he told the ABC.
'In terms of a workplace, it was bloody awful, and frankly, a lot of the time, miserable.'
It was the people he represented and those who felt let down by Parliament that motivated Chandler-Mather to keep going.
'We were getting attacked because we said we should spend a bit more on public housing and give something to renters. I feel proud of that work … and I think if I had my time again, I would do it all again,' he said.
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'[But] despite all of that and fighting hard work, we fell short, and I feel like I've let people down because I always feel like, at the end of the day, the MP has to take responsibility for that, and I suppose I do.'
He blamed the Greens' loss of lower house seats, including his own, on the decline in votes for the Liberal Party, which resulted in Liberal preferences flowing to Labor.
Despite this, Chandler-Green sees the outcome as 'the second most successful election in Australian Greens history' because of the gains made in the Senate.
'We'll end up with two to three lower house MPs and the largest Senate vote in our history,' he said.
'The only way the government is going to pass legislation through the Senate now is either with the Greens or the Coalition.'
Count Continues
The Australian Greens have failed to win seats they thought they could take from Labor.
This result contrasts with the performance of Climate-200-backed Teal candidates, who won seats from the Coalition.
In the seat of Ryan, Liberal candidate Maggie Forrest is leading the Greens' Elizabeth Watson-Brown on first preferences. But with preference flows from Labor, who are running just 800 votes behind the Greens in the current count, Watson-Brown is expected to hold the seat.
In the seat of Melbourne, the reverse applies. Bandt leads on first preferences with 40.3 percent to Labor's 31.5 percent, but the Green MP needs 33 percent of preferences from other parties to retain his seat.
The Australian Electoral Commission's official preference count currently shows flows of under 26 percent, which means Labor still leads the projected two-candidate preferred count and holds a chance of victory.

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San Francisco Chronicle
30 minutes ago
- San Francisco Chronicle
Army secretary wants to move more quickly on an agreement for Hawaii live-fire training lands
SCHOFIELD BARRACKS, Hawaii (AP) — The U.S. Army's top civilian leader said Tuesday that he wants to move more quickly on an agreement that will allow the military to continue using the only large-scale live-fire training range for ground forces in Hawaii. Army Secretary Dan Driscoll said he discussed the issue during a meeting with Hawaii Gov. Josh Green on Monday. The Army leases a key part of Pohakuloa Training Area on the Big Island from the state, and its contract to do so expires in 2029. It wants to be able to continue using the land so it can quickly send troops from Hawaii to Asia and the Pacific, something that is growing in importance as China becomes more assertive particularly regarding Taiwan, the self-ruled island that Beijing claims as its own territory. A May public hearing on whether to extend the lease generated hours of testimony against allowing the Army to stay. Many Native Hawaiians and environmental activists upset with the U.S. military's history of damaging Hawaiian lands with target practice and fuel leaks said they wanted the Army to return the land to the state. Driscoll told reporters the Army needs the Pohakuloa land, which sits on a rocky plateau about 6,200 feet (1,890 meters) above sea level between the Big Island's tallest volcanoes, Mauna Kea and Mauna Loa. 'The world is changing. We all know this. The threat in Indo-Pacom is more real than ever before,' Driscoll told reporters, referring to the U.S. Indo-Pacific Command, which overseas military operations in Asia and the Pacific. He said he wanted a more aggressive timeline 'to bake out these negotiations in the coming months, rather than waiting until 2027, 2028 and 2029.' 'This land matters to the United States Army. We have got to be able to train here.' Driscoll said. Driscoll said he asked Green's office for a list within the next few weeks of things the Army can do to help the community. 'What we are hoping to do is figure out ways where we, the Army, can continue to contribute to a community that has given so much to our Army and so much to our nation, while at the same time acknowledging the very real world threat that we are facing in the Indo-Pacific,' Driscoll said. The Army says other live-fire training areas in Hawaii are too small to accommodate battalions and brigades. And commanders say they wouldn't be able to deter potential adversaries in the Indo-Pacific if they have to spend extra time transporting troops to the region from U.S. mainland training ranges. Green said he spent significant time on Monday speaking with Driscoll and his team. "We will be exploring possibilities on the military leases together in the coming days and weeks, and he now better understands how important it is to us to work together for the good of Hawaii's people and our land, while we all work together protect our country,' Green said in a statement. U.S. Rep. Jill Tokuda, a Democrat whose district includes rural Oahu and the Big Island, has said she wants the military to help increase Hawaii's housing supply and bolster Hawaii's water and sewer infrastructure. Healani Sonoda-Pale, a community organizer with the Native Hawaiian sovereignty group Ka Lahui Hawaii, said the state needs to look at how the Army is managing these lands. She said it would be irresponsible for negotiations to bypass that process. 'There shouldn't be any backdoor discussions regarding these leases,' she said. Driscoll visited Hawaii during a Pacific trip that will also include stops in Australia and the Philippines. He spoke to journalists in front of two HIMARS rocket launchers, which are designed to deliver precision strikes to long-range targets. Hawaii-based soldiers with the 25th Infantry Division are due to receive 16 of the launchers, which the U.S. also supplied to Ukraine to help it defend against Russia's invasion.
Yahoo
an hour ago
- Yahoo
'Wrong side of history': senator hits out at sanction
Greens senator Mehreen Faruqi has doubled down on her silent protest about the Israel-Gaza war, accusing parliament of "cracking down on black and brown women" after she was sanctioned by the upper house. As Governor-General Sam Mostyn delivered her speech in the upper house on Tuesday for the opening of the 48th parliament, Senator Faruqi held a sign that read: "Gaza is starving. Words won't feed them. Sanction Israel". The government's Senate leader Penny Wong introduced a motion on Wednesday to disapprove of the Greens senator's conduct. It also requests an apology for "unparliamentary conduct" in addition to not supporting her as a potential Senate representative on any delegation during this term. "What she wants most of all is attention," Senator Wong said. "Australians expect us, their elected representatives, to uphold our democratic institutions, to demonstrate a degree of respect for each other as they do, and a respect for our institutions." Labor and the coalition voted in favour of the sanction, while the Greens and WA senator Fatima Payman voted against it. Senator Faruqi accused her colleagues of being on the "wrong side of history" for a lack of action against Israel over its response in Gaza following the October 7 attack by Hamas in 2023. "You are more focused on cracking down on black and brown women," she said, before later accepting calls to withdraw the comment. "The Greens will not be silent as this genocide unfolds. "You will not be able to intimidate me or any of my colleagues, and we will never stop fighting for freedom, for Palestine." Prime Minister Anthony Albanese said people elected to the parliament have a responsibility to act like an adult. "There's a place for demonstrations, and it's not on the floor of the Senate or the House of Reps, for that matter," he told the ABC. Coalition Senate leader Michaelia Cash criticised the Greens senator for her "breach of respect". "It was deliberate, prolonged and clearly intended to politicise a solemn and ceremonial event," she said. "Rules without enforcement are meaningless ... and institutions without discipline become irrelevant." Pro-Palestinian protester Shane Bazzi was taken out of the upper house by security guards after he began shouting from the public gallery while the motion was being discussed. "Shame, shame," he yelled while being removed. Hundreds of protesters called for sanctions on Israel on the lawns of parliament during its opening with one woman arrested, according to the Australian Federal Police.

3 hours ago
Army secretary wants to move more quickly on an agreement for Hawaii live-fire training lands
SCHOFIELD BARRACKS, Hawaii -- The U.S. Army's top civilian leader said Tuesday that he wants to move more quickly on an agreement that will allow the military to continue using the only large-scale live-fire training range for ground forces in Hawaii. Army Secretary Dan Driscoll said he discussed the issue during a meeting with Hawaii Gov. Josh Green on Monday. The Army leases a key part of Pohakuloa Training Area on the Big Island from the state and its contract to do so expires in 2029. It wants to be able to continue using the land so it can quickly send troops from Hawaii to Asia and the Pacific, something that is growing in importance as China becomes more assertive particularly regarding Taiwan. A May public hearing on whether to extend the lease generated hours of testimony against allowing the Army to stay. Many Native Hawaiians and environmental activists upset with the U.S. military's history of damaging Hawaiian lands with target practice and fuel leaks said they wanted the Army to return the land to the state. Driscoll told reporters the Army needs the Pohakuloa land, which sits on a rocky plateau about 6,200 feet (1,890 meters) above sea level between the Big Island's tallest volcanoes, Mauna Kea and Mauna Loa. 'The world is changing. We all know this. The threat in Indo-Pacom is more real than ever before,' Driscoll told reporters, referring to the U.S. Indo-Pacific Command, which overseas military operations in Asia and the Pacific. He said he wanted a more aggressive timeline 'to bake out these negotiations in the coming months, rather than waiting until 2027, 2028 and 2029.' 'This land matters the United States Army. We have got to be able to train here.' Driscoll said. Driscoll said he asked Green's office to give the Army a list within the next few weeks of things the Army can do to help the community. 'What we are hoping to do is figure out ways where we, the Army, can continue to contribute to a community that has given so much to our Army and so much to our nation, while at the same time acknowledging the very real world threat that we are facing in the Indo-Pacific,' Driscoll said. The Army says other live-fire training areas in Hawaii are too small to accommodate battalions and brigades. And commanders say they wouldn't be able to deter potential adversaries in the Indo-Pacific if they have to spend extra time transporting troops to the region from U.S. mainland training ranges. Green said he spent significant time on Monday speaking with Driscoll and his team. "We will be exploring possibilities on the military leases together in the coming days and weeks, and he now better understands how important it is to us to work together for the good of Hawaii's people and our land, while we all work together protect our country,' Green said in a statement. The governor said he updated Hawaii's congressional delegation on the meetings. Green said he would get the community's input 'as we move forward.' U.S. Rep. Jill Tokuda, a Democrat whose district includes rural Oahu and the Big Island, has said she wants the military to help increase Hawaii's housing supply and bolster Hawaii's water and sewer infrastructure. Driscoll visited Hawaii during a Pacific trip that will also include stops in Australia and the Philippines. He spoke to journalists in front of two HIMARS rocket launchers, which are designed to deliver precision strikes to long-range targets. Hawaii-based soldiers with the 25th Infantry Division are due to receive 16 of the launchers, which the U.S. also supplied to Ukraine to help it defend against Russia's invasion.