11 C
Byron Shire
June 24, 2026

Comment – National Party encumbrance a problem for Liberals in NSW too

Latest News

NSW budget and the Northern Rivers

The Minns government says it's handed down a budget which locks in major funding for North Coast health infrastructure, alongside targeted cost-of-living relief designed for regional households and disaster recovery, as locals continue to face higher costs.

Other News

NT Intervention

I refer to the NT Intervention article, Echo page 4, 17 June. Recent events in the Northern Territory (NT) would...

Digital age

When travelling these days there is a lot of cards come and go. They are like a business card...

Tweed Shire Council presents flood resilience series – part one

Over the coming weeks, Tweed Shire Council will present a flood resilience series, which looks at how 'Tweed's story is different from the standard flood recovery narrative and what happened next'.

Wyuna 1 freed from Belongil Beach

There's been a happy ending to the saga of Jeff Sutton's yacht Wyuna 1, which has been beached near Elements at North Belongil since early May, after being damaged in heavy weather.

Winter Warmer fundraiser for homelessness

The annual Winter Warmer Homelessness Relief campaign, hosted by Dharma Care, will return for 2026 with cabaret at Salt, Kingscliff, on Thursday 2 July, headlined by comedian Mandy Nolan, interactive performance artist The Space Cowboy and the Kinship Doobai Dancers, with a Welcome to Country from Aunty Jackie.

Greens say NSW budget ‘locks in pokies misery’

Cate Faehrmann MLC says the NSW government has knocked any hope of gambling reform on the head in yesterday’s state budget, with tax concessions to clubs with poker machines totalling $1.252 billion, while revenue from taxes on poker machine losses have been revised upward by a whopping $638.2 million over the forward estimates.

Independent MP Justin Field

There is no shortage of NSW Liberal MPs out in the media warning they could be next to fall in the push from independent candidates that saw a massive shake up of politics in Australia last weekend.

However, there is a false assertion from some, namely ‘moderate’ Liberals in potentially vulnerable seats, that on climate, the NSW Coalition has a good record that may insulate them.

No doubt Matt Kean has shown refreshing leadership on climate, changing the language Australians have come to expect from Liberal Ministers and championing major energy reforms that will accelerate renewable energy generation in NSW.

But dig a little deeper and the Coalition’s record on climate and the environment more generally leaves a terrible legacy that deserves to be challenged.

The Murray Darling River system, near Kinchega Station and Tolarno Station in 2016. Photo Spelio www.flickr.com/photos/spelio

In coalition with the Nationals

While there are key differences that create contrast between Federal and NSW Liberal MPs, neither can escape the fact that in Government they are in coalition with the Nationals Party.

The NSW Nationals control of natural resources policy for the last 12 years has been a disaster for the climate and environment and the Liberals consistently turn a blind eye, desperate to avoid a split in the Coalition agreement which underpins their ability to hold Government.

In just the last term of this Liberal and National Government (since 2019) ten new major coal and gas projects have been approved. The combined scope 1 and 2 emissions of these projects – the ones generated here in Australia – would wipe out the gains Matt Kean said would be delivered by his Renewable Energy Roadmap over the next 10 years. Those emissions are dwarfed by what will be created overseas when our coal and gas is burnt.

The aftermath of logging in the Girard State Forest. Image: Dailan Pugh

Dying river and forest systems

With the Nationals in charge of land and water management, NSW has effectively walked away from the Murray Darling Basin Plan despite fish kills during the drought making international news and despite ICAC warning of systemic favouritism of irrigator interests over the healthy rivers and river communities and failures to uphold NSW water law.

Large scale land clearing has returned with over 150,000 hectares of clearing on private farmland and more than 500,000 hectares of land clearing approvals yet to be acted on leaving a ticking time bomb for biodiversity in this state no matter who takes Government after March next year and further undermining emissions reductions from energy reform.

Koala killed in the fires in Ellangowan State Forest. Photo supplied.

Koala wars

The Koala, which famously sparked the flare up between the Nationals and Liberals in this term, and was reportedly described as a ‘tree rat’ by the former Nationals leader John Barilaro, has just this month been declared officially endangered in NSW. Despite this, the state-owned forestry corporation is still today logging prime koala habitat in the North of the state with sign-off from successive Liberal Environment Ministers. This stands in stark contrast to decisions recently taken in Western Australia and Victoria where those State Governments have moved to end native forest logging.

The optional preferential system in NSW makes it harder for Independents and non-major party candidates to win lower house seats in NSW but there is already a crossbench of nine with a mix of Independents, Greens and Shooters, Fishers and Farmers. Interestingly, five of the nine crossbenchers took seats off the Nationals over the last three general elections and a series of by-elections. The Nationals are on the nose with the electorate but the Liberals continue to prop them up and accept their disastrous policy platform.

The circumstances that led to the massive shift in electoral politics at the federal level last weekend is not identical in NSW, but not entirely different either. Leaving the Nationals to dictate natural resource management is destroying our rivers and landscape and fuelling climate change. These failures should elicit a push by community independents – either in challenging Nationals directly or challenging those Liberals who have failed to challenge the Nationals while in Government.



For four decades The Echo has printed the stories some people loved, some people hated, and some pretended not to read. If you want us to keep telling the truth, the real truth, not the sugar-coated version. We’ll need your support to keep the presses rolling.

If you are a local business owner help us and in turn we help you. All The Echo asks for is advertising, not a free ride. It is every advert in The Echo and on www.echo.net.au, which creates the space for all the stories and coverage of community events, happenings and concerns.

If you are a reader you can become a sponsor of The Echo. Your support keeps the us independent.

Even a small one-off or regular donation from you will help keep the echo’s independent voice alive and strong.

Support Us

Become one of the supporters who helps keep independent, local journalism alive in the Byron Shire by contributing anything from as little as the cost of a coffee each month.

You're Wonderful, Thank you for supporting independent journalism in the Byron Shire

You’re supporting The Echo, thank you

Your contribution is keeping independent, local journalism alive in the Northern Rivers.

Because of supporters like you, we can keep every story free for everyone — no paywall, no exceptions. Your money goes directly to funding our newsroom of 40-odd local workers covering the stories that matter to this community.

Tell us what you think, give us your opinion

The Echo loves your letters and comments and is proud to provide a community forum on the issues that matter most to our readers and the people of the NSW north coast. So don’t be a passive reader, email us your epistles at editor@echo.net.au.

The letters deadline for The Echo is noon Friday. Letters longer than 200 words may be cut. The publication of letters is at the discretion of the letters editor. Please remember to include your full name, address and telephone number.

Online comments are no longer available.

Appeal to locate missing woman

Police are appealing for public assistance to locate a woman missing from the Kempsey area.

Citizen science last line of defence for threatened species

Native forest logging is again in the spotlight in NSW, following Monday night’s Four Corners investigation into Forestry Corporation NSW’s failure to protect nationally endangered species.

Site confirmed for future high school at Pottsville

The NSW government says it has secured a site for a future high school in Pottsville, delivering on its commitment to future-proof public education for the growing Tweed community in the Northern Rivers.

Eleven winners at Byron Bay Herb Nursery

The Byron Bay Herb Nursery continues to create constructive pathways to achievement with twelve students from Byron Bay Herb Nursery’s disability support program recently graduating with a Certificate II in Horticulture.