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Liberal party ‘split down middle’ after Deeming vote

Ousted MP Moira Deeming will not rejoin the Liberal Party, after a narrow vote on Friday

Ousted MP Moira Deeming will not rejoin the Liberal Party, after a narrow vote on Friday Photo: AAP

Victorian Liberal leader John Pesutto denies he’s at the helm of a divided party, despite a split vote on Moira Deeming’s return to the fold.

Twenty-eight MPs met for just over an hour on Friday morning to thrash out a motion calling for Deeming’s re-entry to the Liberals’ caucus after Pesutto was found by a court to have defamed her.

She was expelled from the parliamentary party after a controversial rally she attended in March 2023 was gatecrashed by neo-Nazis.

The vote on Friday was tied 14-all with Pesutto using his casting vote to decide Deeming’s fate – she stays expelled.

“This concludes the matter,” he said afterwards.

Pesutto said technically his casting vote was not needed because the motion required an absolute majority of 16 members under the party’s constitution.

Two MPs, Cindy McLeish and Nick McGowan, were absent.

Pesutto and his allies appeared downcast when leaving the meeting, but he denied being shocked at the closeness of the result amid claims it was a “slap in the face” to his leadership.

“This was a party room meeting that addressed the circumstances ultimately of March of last year,” he said.

“There were always a diverse range of views and that was well known.

“Today was always foreshadowed that we would ultimately revisit the question. It’s been revisited and today marks a bookend to this discussion.”

The motion was signed by Benambra MP Bill Tilley, opposition emergency services spokesman Richard Riordan and first-term backbenchers Renee Heath, Joe McCracken and Chris Crewther.

The rebel group said they wanted to give their colleagues a chance to “do the right thing” after the Federal Court found Pesutto defamed Deeming and ordered he pay $315,632 in damages.

Upper house MP Bev McArthur said Justice David O’Callaghan had done everything but demand Deeming’s re-entry into the party room, declaring she was ejected based on a “lie”.

“That was our job today and we failed,” she said.

“It was a glorious opportunity to fix the situation, the terrible wrong that was done in May 2023.”

She said the leadership team did not offer any concessions to Deeming or her supporters during the debate.

Shadow cabinet secretary Ann-Marie Hermans, who also backed the motion, said the draw meant the issue was not resolved.

“Internally we will have a lot more work to do,” she said.

Riordan agreed the matter had not been resolved.

“Our party room is split down the middle,” he said.

Crewther said it was a very disappointing outcome and “it may be difficult to unite” the party.

Pesutto was found to have made defamatory comments implying Deeming was associated with Nazis, in media interviews and a party expulsion motion following the 2023 Melbourne rally she attended.

She was initially handed a nine-month suspension before being booted from the parliamentary party after threatening to sue Pesutto.

He has refused to resign following the Federal Court decision, triggering former tennis player turned Nepean MP Sam Groth to quit his shadow cabinet.

Pesutto flagged a shadow cabinet reshuffle was imminent but refused to say whether backers of the motion would be left out.

On Thursday, he was ordered to pay Deeming’s yet-to-be-determined legal costs. He has confirmed he will not appeal the judgment, despite suggesting there were “potential grounds” to do so.

-AAP

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