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Collapse Issue 413 - 20 Feb 2017Issue 413 - 20 Feb 2017
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One Nation not registered for Gosford by-election

Pauline Hanson's One Nation Party will not be able to run candidates in the Gosford by-election, despite having "a better chance of winning" than the Liberals.

The party has not been registered as a political party in NSW in time for the by-election.

Ms Hanson has said she intended to have the party registered to contend the NSW State election in 2019.

However, One Nation supporters could run in the Gosford by-election as independent candidates.

Shortly after the announcement of Ms Kathy Smith's resignation as the State Member for Gosford, Sportsbet tipped Labor to win the by-election but also predicted that One Nation had a better chance of winning the seat than the Liberals.

Mr Will Byrne from Sportsbet said: "The Liberals would usually be challenging for favouritism but it's One Nation who follow Labor ($1.60 to win) at odds of $4.

"Further down the pecking order on $5 is the Liberal Party with the Christian Democratic (Fred Nile) Party ($51) and Greens ($101), the outsiders.

"The Liberal Party lost Gosford at the election by only a couple of hundred votes but this time the odds are very much against them, reducing that margin and it looks a safe Labor hold," Mr Byrnes said.

Independent candidates could spoil Sportsbet's predictions.

Former Liberal Member for Gosford, Mr Chris Holstein, who lost the seat at the last NSW state election to Ms Smith by 203 votes has not ruled out having another tilt, this time as an independent.

"I am going to weigh up who is there and whether they have the interests of the Central Coast at heart," Mr Holstein said.

"We will need to look very closely to see the quality of candidates from all parties," he said.

Mr Holstein expressed his sympathies for Ms Smith and her family and said he would "pray Kathy Smith gets a positive outcome" from her next round of cancer treatment.

Mr Holstein is currently chairman of the Central Coast Taskforce, an advocacy group set up and backing by entrepreneur Mr John Singleton.

"The job of the Taskforce has always been to point out to the government what it needs to do for the Central Coast community," Mr Holstein said.

Mr Singleton has property development interests which may mean he is a prohibited donor in NSW.

The NSW Electoral Commission lists property developers as prohibited donors and defines them as: "a corporation engaged in a business that regularly involves the making of relevant planning applications by or on behalf of the corporation in connection with the residential or commercial development of land, with the ultimate purpose of the sale or lease of the land for profit".

The Commission also defines a "close associate" of a banned donor and gives provision for entities to "apply to be determined as not a prohibited donor".





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