BRISBANE, AAP – Mining billionaire Clive Palmer is to attempt a return to federal politics, announcing he will lead his party’s Senate team in the upcoming election.
Mr Palmer’s United Australia Party plans to field Senate candidates in every state and territory, with the one-time lower house MP last tasting victory in 2013 when he won the Sunshine Coast seat of Fairfax.
“The reason I’ve come back into politics and taken a key role at this important time is because of the state of the nation,” he said in Brisbane on Wednesday, pointing to the level of national debt.
“I’d like to be on my boat but I’m not, I’m in this situation.”
The anti vaccine-mandate advocate says his party has attracted more than 80,000 members, who will be backed by a campaign with significant resources.
Top Australian Brokers
- City Index - Aussie shares from $5 - Read our review
- Pepperstone - Trading education - Read our review
- IC Markets - Experienced and highly regulated - Read our review
- eToro - Social and copy trading platform - Read our review
“I don’t budget, we just respond to the political circumstance,” he said.
The party has just one seat in the federal parliament – the electorate of Hughes held by Craig Kelly, who was elected as a Liberal candidate until he resigned to sit as an independent before joining the UAP.
But Mr Palmer continues to spruik the party’s chances in the election to be held sometime before the end of May, and says candidates will also be fielded in every lower house seat.
“We can win seats in Western Sydney, Western Melbourne. There are seats in Queensland that we can win,” he said.
The party’s Senate team also includes former Deloitte Australia CEO Domenic Martino in NSW and property executive Ralph Babet in Victoria.
The announcement follows controversy sparked by Mr Kelly, who caught the attention of the Therapeutic Goods Administration after spamming people with unsolicited text messages last year.
The messages included a link to a website showing listings of “adverse event notifications” from COVID-19 vaccines, which TGA’s John Skerritt labelled a misuse of data.