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Teal party speculation ‘not a surprise’ says cabinet minister

Mark Butler says he’s not surprised to see speculation that the community teal independents could form a party – with the political spectrum in “flux” right now.

Speaking to ABC’s News Breakfast this morning, the health minister says (rather unsurprisingly) that it’s “a matter for them”.

There’s speculation this morning that Allegra Spender and Zali Steggall could be leading talks for a grouping of the independents. Independent senator David Pocock yesterday said he was open to a party forming to help counter One Nation.

Butler says:

double quotation markThey’ve [teal independents] obviously made inroads in particular communities in Australia. They’ll make their own assessment about whether that works for them.

There obviously is a lot of flux in the non-Labor parts of politics right now, so to see speculation like that’s perhaps not a surprise.

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‘If it walks like a duck…’ Hume calls teal party the worst kept secret in Canberra

Liberal deputy leader, Jane Hume, says that the teals in party talks has been the “worst kept secret” in Canberra, arguing the group have acted like a party for a while.

She tells Sky News the move would be good for Labor and the Greens because the Teals vote with them “70% of the time”.

Indulge me for a second to bring you some facts on this. It’s a claim the Coalition have made a lot, particularly during the last parliament and during the 2025 election campaign. If you want to see how often the community independents actually voted with Labor or the Greens versus the Coalition – have a read of this very in depth fact check by my colleague, Nick Evershed:

Now back to Hume:

double quotation markThis is probably the worst kept secret in Canberra, isn’t it? For a number of years, we’ve been saying that if it walks like a duck and it quacks like a duck, it’s a duck. The Teals have been a party since they began. They’ve had the same funding sources, they’ve had the same campaign teams, they’ve worn the same colours, but worse than that, they had the same slogan, and the slogan was about integrity, and that integrity has now simply been gone out the window.

Hume is asked whether she has been approached to join the new party, she says “absolutely not” and adds:

double quotation markI think changing political parties is a little bit like changing football teams. I can’t understand why people would even consider it.

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