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Nahan Appoints Jim Andersen to Board of Directors texasguardian.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from texasguardian.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Chad Johnson is new Habitat for Humanity director; Nahan has new CEO sctimes.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from sctimes.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
PM shrugs off WA Liberal wipeout Save Share Scott Morrison says Mark McGowanâs crushing win in Saturdayâs West Australian election was a resounding endorsement of leadership during the COVID-19 crisis, indicating his government will be similarly rewarded if it does not mess up the response from here. Landslide victory: WA Premier Mark McGowan and his wife Sarah meet the public in Rockingham on Sunday. Â Getty âProbably like at no other time I have seen, there is a real distinction between state politics and federal politics,â he said. âThis is a resounding victory, an endorsement of his leadership during the course of the COVID-19 pandemic.â
WA election's biggest losers and who replaced them in Liberal annihilation SunSunday 14 updated SunSunday 14 Opposition Leader Zak Kirkup faces media after conceding defeat. ( Share Print text only Cancel A history-making Labor victory has all but wiped out the WA Liberal party, turning many seats red for the very first time. The Liberals could be left with as few as two seats in the Legislative Assembly — meaning the party has failed to get the numbers to form Opposition. So, who are the biggest losers? It's a long list of Liberal names. Dawesville Loser: Zak Kirkup (LIB) Paramedic and psychologist Lisa Munday pulled off what many would have thought impossible not long ago when she unseated Opposition Leader Zak Kirkup.
Labor wins historic landslide in Western Australia elections Labor wins historic landslide in Western Australia elections Mark McGowan was flanked by his family during his victory speech. (Photo / Getty) Labor wins historic landslide in Western Australia elections Sun, 14 Mar 2021, 1:08PM Labor has emphatically won the West Australian election in a second successive historic win, evicting the Liberals from many of its traditionally held blue-ribbon seats with staggering swings across the metropolitan area. Political guru Antony Green made the call just 43 minutes after polling booths closed with only one per cent of votes counted, describing wildly popular Premier Mark McGowan’s primary vote surge as “quite remarkable”.
Why Mark McGowan's landslide election victory could spell disaster for Scott Morrison in WA as the Liberals are reduced to just TWO MPs Western Australians went to the polling booths on Saturday in state election tipped to be a landslide for Labor Voting at 700 locations closed at 6pm on Saturday with 750,000 people voting before election day Labor premier Mark McGowan raced to immediate lead with ABC's Anthony Green declaring a win early on Liberal leader Zak Kirkup conceded defeat at 9.30pm AWST and declared he had also lost his individual seat
Share on Twitter Premier Mark McGowan is set to enjoy unprecedented dominance in Western Australia, after winning an increased majority for the Labor party in the state's parliament. Labor is expected to claim up to 53 out of 59 lower house seats on the back of a stunning 16.9 per cent swing. READ MORE It is a nightmare scenario for the Liberals, who are set to be reduced to just two or three seats and lose their opposition status to the Nationals. With 43 per cent of lower house votes counted, Labor has almost three times the number of first-preference votes of the Liberal party.
The state of the WA opposition as Zak Kirkup becomes a private citizen We’re sorry, this service is currently unavailable. Please try again later. Dismiss Normal text size Advertisement Zak Kirkup cut a lonely figure as he got out of his car in the darkened Dudley Park Bowling and Recreation Club parking lot in Mandurah, south of Perth, to give a face to the Liberal Party’s greatest defeat. Buttoning his jacket and stepping toward the throng of awaiting cameras, he strode alone into the function room full of 100 awaiting friends, family, and Liberal supporters with the knowledge only two of his colleagues were likely to be returned in parliament’s lower house.