Campaigners report that unaffordable housing, planning, the environment and Israel鈥檚 war in Gaza were concerns for voters in local government elections, for which the final results will only be known from聽.
The Liberal Party鈥檚 failure to file paperwork in time for would have benefited Labor candidates and, in some councils, the more right-wing Libertarian Party (formerly the Liberal Democrat Party).
Backed by the conservative anti-environment Advance Australia, the Libertarian Party ran more candidates than any other party apart from Labor, Liberal and the Greens. It won councillors in Camden, Penrith, Canterbury-Bankstown and the MidCoast. In Gloucester, it became the largest council grouping.
Its : getting 鈥渨oke BS out of council鈥; tearing down the 鈥渟urveillance state鈥; supporting 鈥減rivate property rights鈥; privatising council-run businesses; and ending 鈥渨aste鈥, such as bike lanes.
, NSW鈥檚 sole Libertarian MP, told The Guardian on September 15 the party鈥檚 strong showing would set it up for a run at both houses in the federal and state elections.
But the Liberals did nominate in some areas; it won a majority in Ryde Council as well as the mayoral position and won in every Parramatta Council ward.
Liverpool鈥檚 Liberal mayor Ned Mannoun, who聽聽was re-elected.
Labor won back the mayoralty in Wollongong, after independent Gordon Bradbury retired. But it lost the mayoral position in Newcastle, after Ross Kerridge, a former Labor member, challenged with the .
Kerridge ran on a platform of 鈥済etting back to basics鈥, such as real community consultation and collaboration.
Labor suffered a 10% swing in Canterbury-Bankstown. It faced some backlash in Cumberland鈥檚 wards with large Muslim-Australian populations. In Penrith, it gained East Ward by default, due to the Liberals鈥櫬爁ailure to register.
In the South Granville ward of Cumberland Council, looks likely to win a position.
Premier Chris Minns told the Sydney Morning Herald on September 19 that the preliminary election results were a 鈥渕assive wake-up call鈥 about 鈥渆conomic challenges鈥. A senior anonymous聽 on September 15 that Labor has been sent 鈥渁 clear message on the Middle East but also more broadly鈥. 鈥淭here is no doubt that Gaza played a big part in our results in south-western Sydney,鈥 they said.
Another Labor campaigner said the election was a litmus test on whether voters would punish federal Labor. 鈥淚t is pretty clear that we took a hit on Gaza, but there would be other factors like cost of living 鈥 On the booths, there was an anti-Albo sentiment.鈥
Greens set to gain
The NSW Greens won 65 councillors in 2021 and look set to gain more this time. According to spokesperson , the party ran its biggest-ever campaign, with 376 candidates in 61 contests.
The Greens won an additional seat in Newcastle and Wollongong, going from two to at least three councillors.
They are hoping to win their first position in Cumberland, Blacktown and Ryde. They are also hoping for a second position in the City of Sydney (and a sixth in the Inner West). The Greens聽did better in Bayside, Campbelltown, and possibly Parramatta. They received positive swings in Canterbury-Bankstown.
However, they lost a spot in Woollahra and Randwick councils and suffered a swing in Waverley, with one of two positions still in the balance.
Philipa Veitch, former Greens mayor of Randwick, will be re-elected, along with two other Greens. She has faced significant pressure from Zionist lobby groups for her pro-Palestine position and recently survived a Liberal no-confidence motion, when Labor refused to back it.
It is possible the Labor-Liberal-Zionist campaign to put the Greens last, via the third-party registered group Better Councils Inc,聽had some impact in the east and Inner West Council, although that is hard to quantify.
Socialists
Socialist Alliance (SA) ran in the 补苍诲听, focusing on council-initiated and public housing, community democracy and cutting ties with apartheid Israel. The party also supported the campaign.
SA mayoral candidate for Newcastle Steve O鈥橞rien received 2.6% and the SA ticket for Ward 1 received 3%. O鈥橞rien said Kerridge鈥檚 election as mayor 鈥渂odes well for the community鈥.
SA鈥檚 Rachel Evans secured almost 900 votes for Mayor (1.02%) in the City of Sydney and the first-time councillor ticket won 871 votes (at the time of writing).
, a community ticket led by Tony Oldfield of the Communist Party of Australia, won 1134 votes in Regents Park Ward in Cumberland. Oldfield was a former councillor聽in Auburn.
Independents
Long-time Independent City of Sydney Mayor Clover Moore recorded a 6% negative swing, although she was re-elected. Her team lost its majority control of the council. Labor looks like winning a second position. First Nations independent retained her position, and the Greens hope to gain another with the Liberals losing one.
Progressive independents were re-elected. Other independents, including , based in Kogarah and Hurstville, look likely to increase their representation.
also look to be re-elected. RFW campaigned against reducing the number of councillors in a council referendum, initiated by the Liberals, which narrowly lost.
Inner-West failed to rewin his position in Baludarri/Balmain against a Liberal, whereas former independent Victor Macri, who failed to win in 2021, is predicted to pick up a position in Midjuburi/Marrickville, where the Liberals did not nominate a candidate.
During the campaign, the third-party campaign group 鈥淲e Vote for Palestine鈥 collected 180 candidate pledges, including from Canterbury-Bankstown鈥檚 and Randwick聽.
We Vote for Palestine lodged complaints with the NSW Electoral Commission and the City of Sydney about the alleged removal of their signage by City of Sydney contractors. The also lodged a complaint.