28 January 2026

Greens to thrash out coalition proposal but Liberals can't be trusted, warns member

| By Ian Bushnell
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Shane Rattenbury and Jo Clay outside the legislative assembly

The Greens leadership team, Shane Rattenbury and Jo Clay, will face members. Photo: Region.

The possibility of forming a Greens-Liberal government will be discussed at an ACT Greens members meeting on Thursday night (29 January), but it is likely to get a hostile reception.

Leader Shane Rattenbury will front the meeting to explain the state of play and sound out whether there is member backing for continuing to talk to the Opposition about a possible power-sharing agreement.

But a prominent Greens member who spoke on condition of anonymity says there is unlikely to be much support for the idea, given the lack of common ground and trust between the two parties.

“I don’t think the members of either party would be terribly happy about it,” said the member, who also gave a devastating critique of the state of government and the Opposition in the ACT.

They said the Greens could not trust the Liberals or Labor.

“And that is actually the difficulty because this whole business runs on trust and there just isn’t any,” they said.

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Canberra Liberals Leader Mark Parton generally stuck to his word, but he did not have control of his own party room.

“There’s just not enough common ground for the kind of partnership that Labor and the Greens have had in the past,” the member said.

“It would have to be a different kind of arrangement for something to work, either with Labor or with the Liberals, and I don’t know if it’s even possible in the current Assembly, and you can’t go to an early election in the ACT.”

The member said the state of the ACT’s budget and a sclerotic Labor government demanded change, but there was no apparent way to achieve it.

“We’re in a situation where Labor aren’t doing anything to dig themselves out of the hole that they’ve already got themselves into. They’re just making life worse for everyone,” they said.

“Something’s going to need to change, but the question is what, and how do you do it?”

The member said the departure of Chief Minister Andrew Barr could be sooner rather than later, which would be followed by a period of instability.

“It’s going to be complete disruption and chaos because Labor has got at least four potential contenders for party leadership, and the three who are most likely to get member support to succeed are all tarnished in some very serious ways, and they’re going to have a whole lot of mess to deal with and probably be quite unfocused,” the member said.

But there was no one in Labor or the Liberals who deserved the Greens’ confidence as Chief Minister.

“Neither of them has someone who has the integrity or the skills to do the job, so how are you supposed to decide which of the two bad choices you go with?” they said.

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The problem for the Liberals, they said, was that they have been out of government for so long that their MLAs did not understand how the public service or mechanics of government worked or have the skills to hold Labor to account.

The public service itself had spent so long working for Labor that its independence had been compromised.

“They don’t know how to give honest advice anymore,” the member said.

With no trigger available for an early election without Commonwealth intervention, the member did not see anything changing until the 2028 election.

“I can’t see a way around this other than we’re all just stuck with vanilla mediocrity from Labor until 2028,” they said.

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The Greens are not a traditional political party. They are social engineers in the best Stalinist & Maoist tradition.

They want to take your money & re engineer an egalatarian society to fit their world view.

The Greens are not a traditional political party. They are social engineers in the best Stalinist & Maoist tradition.

They want to take your money & re engineer an egalatarian society to fit their world view.

Shane Rattenbury has stated that discussions with the Liberals over a transition agreement with them continue. Pretty scary stuff, the most conservative division of the party in the country with the far-right controlling events, including Zed Seselja and lobby group Advance. The baggage the party has accumulated after being in opposition for 24 years, not to mention their federal colleagues’ enmity towards Canberra and its public service, starving our city of funding when they were last in government.

Mr Rattenbury should tell us what his squeaky clean party will do differently after being in four parliamentary terms over 16 years in power sharing agreements with the current Labor government. His party held some of the most significant portfolios after demanding them, portfolio responsibilities which go to the heart of what the Greens stand for. Mr Rattenbury has stood up as leader of his party at EVERY budgetary reply over those years and supported the government. Mr Rattenbury led a Greens party who were constantly in the news for its controversies: accusations of inexperience, poor performance, inappropriate sexual behaviour and bullying allegations forcing the CM to reshuffle portfolio responsibilities and an elected Greens MLA to step down after being referred to police!

Mr Rattenbury should inform voters what discussions have already taken place for a transition to a Liberal government and how both parties will respond to the current complex budgetary pressures facing our city, especially as our nation recovers from the COVID Pandemic. We deserve to know. How will both parties tackle poverty and inequality, education and health investment, law and order, financing infrastructure to create economic activity, supporting and building programs to assist our communities including income support, housing, climate change, emergency services, fostering cohesion etc. etc? How will a Liberal/Greens government engage with the current Federal Labor government for improved funding?

What hypocrites the Greens are!

Shame you never ask those exact questions of the actual current government Jack, nor recognise their recorded failings in pretty much all of those areas over many years.

But I do actually agree with you that it would likely be an unworkable coalition due to their disparate positions on most major policy areas.

Theres no way that the memberships of either party would be supportive.

“The ACT public service itself had spent so long working for Labor that its independence had been compromised.”

Never a truer word has been spoken. When you hear an ACT public servant executive on ABC radio they parrot their Ministers lines and spin without batting an eyelid.

The Transport executives are the worst. Representing the public, providing accurate information, evidence based policy and frank and fearless advice to government are clearly towards the bottom of their priorities.

When will all the sheep in Canberra wake up this has nothing to do with a Liberal/ Green coalition but Ratso the Reds way of seeking the Chief Ministerial control of the Assembly after pooping in their nest, I can’t believe how silly & uneducated the Liberals are but hold hands & do the Ratso/Parto waltz, NEVER.

Breaking: Anonymous Greens member claims Liberals cannot be trusted.

Of all the possible headlines, why go for the most ridiculous ? 😵‍💫

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