17 July 2025

Independents for Canberra is no more, Canberra Socialists get ready to launch

| By Claire Fenwicke
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Thomas Emerson speaks at rally

Crossbench MLA Thomas Emerson entered politics through the Independents for Canberra party. Photo: Supplied.

The political party behind independent MLA Thomas Emerson has been deregistered, as another gets ready to step on to the scene.

Independents for Canberra was officially registered on 8 March, 2024, as a vehicle to get independents into the Legislative Assembly after a quarter of a century without any on the crossbench.

Mr Emerson was elected as a party candidate for Independents for Canberra for the 2024 ACT election, but he resigned from the party on 5 February, 2025, to sit in the Assembly as a non-party MLA.

Independents for Canberra secretary Leigh Cox described Mr Emerson’s election as a “tremendous result” but said the campaign evaluation and views of supporters were clear.

“The best role Independents for Canberra can play is not as a political party. Moving forward, the organisation will look to expand its role as a facilitator and capacity builder for community independents,” he said.

“We will look to work alongside Canberra’s federal Voices movement and organisations like ProACT to canvas electorate-specific community concerns.

“Hopefully we can identify whether certain electorates are hungry for alternative representation and, if so, help identify candidates who are representative of their community’s interests and have a positive, future-oriented vision for Canberra to match.”

Mr Emerson welcomed the evolution of the organisation and expressed his gratitude for its support.

“It’s fantastic to see engagement with grassroots politics continue to grow across our community,” he said.

“I’m excited for the ongoing growth of this movement after a remarkable campaign last year that saw the independent vote surge to record highs at the ACT election, and massive swings toward independents at the federal election earlier this year.”

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Another party looking to build on the success of the federal election is the Canberra Socialists party.

Jordan van Den Lamb was elected to the Victorian Senate, and now the party is setting up branches in every state and territory.

He said the Territory needed the party as a “fighting alternative” against property lobbying and corporate donors.

“Canberra is a city built on the backs of workers, yet it’s become a playground for developers, landlords and the bosses,” he said.

“Whether we’re fighting skyrocketing rents, the gutting of public housing, privatisation, or record profits while it costs us more and more to simply survive, we’re here to organise tenants, workers and students to take power back.”

The party is in the process of registration, with more than 100 ACT residents already on the books.

Interim secretary Elliot Downes felt the party would fill a missing void in Canberra’s political landscape.

“Canberra is often described as Australia’s most progressive city, but well over a thousand people are homeless on any given night,” he said.

“For too long, politics in Canberra has been dominated by Labor, who have sold off vital public housing and offered nothing to the workers who make this city run.

“We need an openly socialist voice in Canberra politics, and that hasn’t existed until now.”

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A socialist party is all we need. At least they are honest about what they are intending I suppose. Socialism always sounds great on the back of big profits (check the bankruptcy rates lately?), but always leads to misery and destitution.

The ACT Labor & Greens governments of the last decade plus haven’t been socialist? They’ve ramped up taxes from amongst the lowest in the country to the very highest, accumulated terrifying levels of debt, grown the size of the ACT PS and managed to deliver some of the worst outcomes for the public. It all sounds very socialist to me.

Absolutely does.

As a registered party, IFC actually gave some transparency to the “none of the major parties” movement. With it’s deregistration, it’s going underground again. It also means that aspiring indies could well have a tougher path to election in 2028 than 2024.

The last thing we need is some socialist.in power. Should be banned from registration just like communism.

lol…they’re a very minor party….maybe banning them is a tad hysterical. BTW Communism isn’t banned in Australia either.

Lol. I don’t think banning them is a bit hysterical at all. If you had the slightest clue what socialism and communism does to society you wouldn’t write such comments. And just for the record when the Berlin wall came down and communism ended back.in.89 there weren’t too.many people flocking to the east.

“We need an openly socialist voice in Canberra politics, and that hasn’t existed until now.”

Wrong, the Democratic Socialist Perspective (previously calling themselves the Socialist Workers League, then the Socialist Workers Party, and now merged into the Socialist Alliance) got 0.5% of the vote (or 713 votes) in the 1989 ACT election, and they ran again in the 1998 ACT election for 0.41% of the vote (or 745 votes).

This group of socialists will be lucky to get 1,000 votes, lucky if they can remain registered until the 2028 election.

No Claire, Jordan was not elected to anything, he got just 1.5% of the Senate vote from Victoria.

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