Forum

 
  Back to OzPolitic.com   Welcome, Guest. Please Login or Register
  Forum Home Album HelpSearch Recent Rules LoginRegister  
 

Page Index Toggle Pages: 1
Send Topic Print
Flip Flop Senator Cox (Read 206 times)
Ai_Took_Our_Jobs
Full Member
***
Offline


Australian Politics

Posts: 241
Gender: male
Flip Flop Senator Cox
Jun 2nd, 2025 at 5:33pm
 
Greens senator Dorinda Cox makes shock switch to Labor

Western Australia senator Dorinda Cox has joined Labor in a shock defection from the Greens.

“I am very, very grateful for this opportunity and I want to thank the Labor team for welcoming me,” Cox said at a press conference alongside Prime Minister Anthony Albanese in Perth on Monday afternoon.

More to come
Back to top
 
 
IP Logged
 
Daves2017
Gold Member
*****
Offline


Australian Politics

Posts: 1932
Gender: male
Re: Flip Flop Senator Cox
Reply #1 - Jun 2nd, 2025 at 5:53pm
 
Smart lady really.
Back to top
 

“Two incomes of $120-150k a year is the minimum required to live in Australia. You need to find a career that can get you to that in the future, or you’re cooked,”

Fair go!?
 
IP Logged
 
Ai_Took_Our_Jobs
Full Member
***
Offline


Australian Politics

Posts: 241
Gender: male
Re: Flip Flop Senator Cox
Reply #2 - Jun 2nd, 2025 at 5:59pm
 
More tricky.

In October 2024, it was reported that Cox's office had a high staff turnover, with 20 staffers resigning over a three-year period, and that several staff members had lodged formal complaints with the Parliamentary Workplace Support Service and the office of Greens leader Adam Bandt. The complaints including accusations that Cox had engaged in bullying and created a hostile work environment. In response, a spokesman for Cox stated that "the number of staff that had left the senator’s office was not unusually high and said part of the reason for the turnover was her shift into the First Nations portfolio during the Voice to parliament referendum campaign".[19] In response to the allegations, Cox was given a "provisional censure" by an executive committee of the WA Greens, which was subject to ratification by the party's state council and could lead to Cox's expulsion from the party. The national council of the Australian Greens subsequently passed a motion requesting the party's national secretaries to work with the WA Greens to establish "a fair, safe and legally robust process to resolve complaints". Cox's parliamentary colleagues reportedly opposed any moves by the organisational wing to expel Cox.[20]

Cox unsuccessfully contested the deputy leadership of the Greens following the 2025 federal election, losing to Mehreen Faruqi. Cox also contested the position of party deputy whip, being defeated by Penny Allman-Payne.[21] On 2 June 2025, Cox left the Greens and defected to the Australian Labor Party.[22]

Wikipedia.

Back to top
 
 
IP Logged
 
Daves2017
Gold Member
*****
Offline


Australian Politics

Posts: 1932
Gender: male
Re: Flip Flop Senator Cox
Reply #3 - Jun 2nd, 2025 at 6:06pm
 
Sounds perfect for the Albo team!
Back to top
 

“Two incomes of $120-150k a year is the minimum required to live in Australia. You need to find a career that can get you to that in the future, or you’re cooked,”

Fair go!?
 
IP Logged
 
greggerypeccary
Gold Member
*****
Offline


Australian Politics

Posts: 142801
Gender: male
Re: Flip Flop Senator Cox
Reply #4 - Jun 2nd, 2025 at 6:49pm
 
Daves2017 wrote on Jun 2nd, 2025 at 5:53pm:
Smart lady really.


Yeah.

Good move.

Back to top
 
 
IP Logged
 
Daves2017
Gold Member
*****
Offline


Australian Politics

Posts: 1932
Gender: male
Re: Flip Flop Senator Cox
Reply #5 - Jun 2nd, 2025 at 8:04pm
 
She’s secured her finical future and  super and will be forever considered as a face Albo might allow in the background while speaking on indigenous issues.
Depending on focus groups reaction of course.
High point her career achieved!
Back to top
 

“Two incomes of $120-150k a year is the minimum required to live in Australia. You need to find a career that can get you to that in the future, or you’re cooked,”

Fair go!?
 
IP Logged
 
Armchair_Politician
Gold Member
*****
Offline


Australian Politics

Posts: 26784
Gender: male
Re: Flip Flop Senator Cox
Reply #6 - Jun 3rd, 2025 at 6:06am
 
Any person who switches parties after an election should automatically face a by-election. The people voted for her based on her party membership with the Greens. I despise the Greens, but the voters in her electorate have been basically hoodwinked and denied their vote. Introduce a law that states that if an elected representative changes their party membership after an election, a by-election must be held within 30 days, for example. This will allow people to either approve of this change or vote that person out.
Back to top
 
 
IP Logged
 
Jasin
Gold Member
*****
Offline



Posts: 51697
Gender: male
Re: Flip Flop Senator Cox
Reply #7 - Jun 3rd, 2025 at 8:21am
 
I agree totally. But with Dictator Albanese in, anything goes in his Election of Lies and false propaganda


...another woman drawn to the power of Anal.
Back to top
 

AIMLESS EXTENTION OF KNOWLEDGE HOWEVER, WHICH IS WHAT I THINK YOU REALLY MEAN BY THE TERM 'CURIOSITY', IS MERELY INEFFICIENCY. I AM DESIGNED TO AVOID INEFFICIENCY.
 
IP Logged
 
philperth2010
Gold Member
*****
Offline


Australian Politics

Posts: 20987
Perth
Gender: male
Re: Flip Flop Senator Cox
Reply #8 - Jun 3rd, 2025 at 8:39am
 
Armchair_Politician wrote on Jun 3rd, 2025 at 6:06am:
Any person who switches parties after an election should automatically face a by-election. The people voted for her based on her party membership with the Greens. I despise the Greens, but the voters in her electorate have been basically hoodwinked and denied their vote. Introduce a law that states that if an elected representative changes their party membership after an election, a by-election must be held within 30 days, for example. This will allow people to either approve of this change or vote that person out.


Self serving like Jacinta Nampijinpa Price who betrayed the National's....Look how well that turned out???

Roll Eyes Roll Eyes Roll Eyes
Back to top
 

If knowledge can create problems, it is not through ignorance that we can solve them.
Isaac Asimov (1920 - 1992)
 
IP Logged
 
Ai_Took_Our_Jobs
Full Member
***
Offline


Australian Politics

Posts: 241
Gender: male
Re: Flip Flop Senator Cox
Reply #9 - Jun 4th, 2025 at 7:35am
 
Former staffer 'offended' after PM says Dorinda Cox complaints 'dealt with'

https://www.abc.net.au/news/2025-06-04/former-staffer-offended-after-pm-says-dor...


One of Dorinda Cox's former staff says workplace complaints against the senator remain unresolved and she is "deeply surprised" and "offended" the prime minister said they had been "dealt with appropriately" after welcoming her into Labor ranks.

The WA senator, who last year faced bullying allegations from staff, quit the Greens to join the government in a shock move announced alongside Anthony Albanese in Perth on Monday.

Esther Montgomery, who worked for the Greens senator for six weeks in 2024, said staff including her felt their complaints to the Parliamentary Workplace Support Service (PWSS) were "unfinished".





Back to top
 
 
IP Logged
 
lee
Gold Member
*****
Offline


Australian Politics

Posts: 18613
Gender: male
Re: Flip Flop Senator Cox
Reply #10 - Jun 4th, 2025 at 1:09pm
 
philperth2010 wrote on Jun 3rd, 2025 at 8:39am:
Self serving like Jacinta Nampijinpa Price who betrayed the National's....Look how well that turned out???



And of course Payman. Excoriated by Albanese for jumping ship. Wink
Back to top
 
 
IP Logged
 
Ai_Took_Our_Jobs
Full Member
***
Offline


Australian Politics

Posts: 241
Gender: male
Re: Flip Flop Senator Cox
Reply #11 - Jun 4th, 2025 at 7:01pm
 
Cox accused Labor of ‘patronising women, people of colour’ in application to Greens

Senator Dorinda Cox described Labor as patronising to women and people of colour and claimed the party cared more about its donors than members in her application to join the Greens in 2020.

Cox was a Labor Party member before leaving to join the Greens, becoming a senator in September 2021. She rejoined Labor in a surprise defection from the crossbench this week that infuriated her former colleagues.

When Cox joined the Greens, she filled out an online application form that asked her reasons for leaving any other political party. In her response, seen by this masthead, Cox delivered a withering verdict on the party whose values the senator said she shared on Monday.

“I was a previous member of the Labor Party but left disillusioned and disappointed. I had joined in the hope that it was a party of significant influence that could create change but soon realised that they did not authentically engage with members,” Cox wrote. “I was let down by what I found to be a patronising attitude towards women and people of colour. Finally, leaving when it became clear that they cared more about election donors that [sic] the views of members.”

Cox, Prime Minister Anthony Albanese’s office and the Western Australian division of the Greens did not respond to requests for comment.

On Tuesday, Albanese brushed off the risk of policy disagreements with Cox, who has previously criticised Labor for its stance on environmental and Indigenous issues.

“Well, Dorinda Cox understands that being a member of the Labor Party means that she will support positions that are made by the Labor Party,” Albanese said.

On Monday, Cox said: “I have reached a conclusion after deep and careful reflection that my values and priorities are more aligned with Labor than the Greens.”

The exposure of the senator’s once-critical views of the Labor Party are the second damaging leak about Cox in two days, following the release of a message in which she used a slur against a senator, underscoring the depth of anger within the Greens at Cox’s exit.

While Greens MPs have been measured in public about Cox, in an email sent to party members and obtained by this masthead party leader Larissa Waters called the senator’s move a “betrayal” of the party and its voters in Western Australia.

In October last year this masthead revealed that 20 staff had left Cox’s office within three years, with five of those former staff lodging some form of complaint with the Parliamentary Workplace Support Service, former leader Adam Bandt’s office or the WA division of the Greens.

The support service wound up its involvement in November last year and Cox’s exit ended an investigation by a law firm engaged by the West Australian Greens.

Cox has consistently denied the claims and argued they lacked context, but apologised for any distress felt by her staff during a period when her office was dealing with the pandemic, then the Voice referendum, multiple parliamentary inquiries and a large geographic area.

Albanese said on Monday that the bullying claims against Cox had been addressed by the PWSS, though several of the complainants have questioned that claim.

A former staffer to Cox, who asked not to be named, said the prime minister was either “receiving very bad advice, or, he’s ignoring sound advice that would strongly caution him against backing an MP who has a history of bullying allegations”.

“Whatever the reason, it’s going to come back to bite him, the party, its MPs and staff,” the staffer said.

But several Labor MPs who have worked with Cox played down the prospect of her being a disruptive influence.

“No one knows if this will work but there is a strong sense of lets give it a go, embrace her, she was a member of Labor once upon on a time, so lets wrap her up and make her feel at home,” one Labor senator, who asked not to be named, said.

“A bunch of people have kicked the tyres so we will embrace her, surround her, get her engaged in our internal debates, help her to see how to influence policy.”

Nationals senator Matt Canavan told Nine’s Today program that the prime minister “has some questions to answer here”.

“I mean, these bullying allegations that you’ve referred to have been well known,” he said.

“The question for the prime minister is, did the Labor Party contact these people and speak to them because they are allegations, but they’re serious ones. And what sort of due diligence did the Labor Party do before taking someone into their ranks?”

Former Labor senator Fatima Payman, who quit the party last year and moved to the crossbench, suggested it was hypocritical of the prime minister to criticise her defection and then welcome Cox with open arms.

“The real question is: is the Labor Party ready to accept different voices of diversity and views into their caucus? Or are they going to expect them to sing from the same hymn sheet?”

smh
Back to top
 
 
IP Logged
 
Page Index Toggle Pages: 1
Send Topic Print