Liberal Senator Bridget McKenzie and Teal independent MP Zali Steggall trade misogyny barbs in heated exchange

Danielle Le Messurier
The Nightly
Bridget McKenzie has fired a salvo at Teal indpendents.
Bridget McKenzie has fired a salvo at Teal indpendents. Credit: LUKAS COCH/AAPIMAGE

Nationals senator Bridget McKenzie has fired a salvo at Teal independents, declaring they are not the sole defenders against misogyny.

Appearing alongside Teal Zali Steggall on Sky News, Senator McKenzie hit out at the idea the independents were somehow doing more for women’s rights.

“I’m also a professional woman in Parliament who stands against misogyny, and I’m a conservative. So, the fact that Zali and all her girlfriends want to make out that they are the only female parliamentarians who want to stand up for women having a voice and having you know, a positive contribution to make to our democracy really just goes to show what they’re all about,” Senator McKenzie said.

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Debate over whether female politicians are influenced by their financial backers intensified this week after Teal independent Allegra Spender fired up over the issue at the National Press Club, saying she had a problem with the “insulting” idea “there’s someone covertly hiding behind us pulling all the strings”.

It followed revelations Ms Spender lobbied the Australian Financial Review to remove wealthy renewables campaigner Simon Holmes a Court from the “covert” section of an annual list of influential Australians.

Mr Holmes a Court established Climate 200, a fundraising company that was the driving financial force behind the election of five teals at the 2022 Federal election.

Ms Steggall stood behind Ms Spender’s comments on Friday, saying she and her colleagues “answer to our community and no one else”.

She said Climate 200 made a “very small donation” to her campaign in 2022, and that she had only spoken to Mr Holmes a Court once in three years.

“All seven MPs are independent MPs and do their own thing, but I think this narrative has evolved and it does have a sexist bias,” Ms Steggall told Sky News.

“I think ultimately all it does is ostracise the very voters that have turned to professional women to represent them, which are professional women who have had enough of misogyny and have been taken always as an assumption that there has to be someone behind them.

“I can assure you we are very feisty, very independent, and no one is pulling out strings.”

Senator McKenzie said supporting the Teal MPs was an “investment strategy” by Mr Holmes a Court, pointing out they all “100 per cent support his renewable-only position”.

She said Mr Holmes a Court was represented as the “Wizard of Oz” through the decision to place him in the “covert” section of the list.

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