







AND THEY DIDNT LOSE A SEAT....
AND GUESS WHAT WALEED WILL BE LIVID ONE NATION GOT A SEAT...


oh dearie dearie me...tsk tsk...
Bring back Luke touchy touch Foley!!!!!
Well done to our 12 NSW One Nation lower house candidates, who averaged 8% primary vote, mostly finishing 3rd behind LNP/ALP in their seats. As high as 13.2% for Ben Casey in Camden. I'm very proud of your efforts and how well we worked together for the people of NSW.
Well done.
Wont last long, as soon as they have a fight with Pauline Hanson!
Or Mark Latham...
If Labor had run with Chris Minns they probably would have won. If the ALP had any sense they would have ditched Shorten long ago too.NSW Labor leader Michael Daley will face a leadership challenge after he stumbled badly in the final week of the campaign and his party's primary vote went backwards at the ballot box.
Party insiders have told the ABC Shadow Water Minister Chris Minns will run against Mr Daley, while Shadow Transport Minister Jodi McKay could also put her name forward for the top job.
Mr Daley has been Opposition Leader for only 19 weeks, after replacing Luke Foley, who resigned suddenly when it was revealed he sexually harassed an ABC journalist at a 2016 Christmas party.
Labor narrowly won the seat of Coogee off the Liberal Party, and remain locked in close races with the Government in Lismore and East Hills.
Labor MPs are dismissive of Mr Daley's prospects of retaining the leadership, with one telling the ABC: "I reckon he's toast."
While Mr Daley started the election campaign on the front foot, the final few days were a disaster.
First, a video emerged of him telling a Labor function last year that young people were leaving Sydney because "Asians with PhDs" were taking their jobs.
Then, during the final televised election debate, he was unable to recall how much some of his party's signature education policies would actually cost.
The comments about immigration were particularly damaging for challenger Mr Minns, who has a high Chinese-Australian population in his Sydney seat of Kogarah.
Mr Minns endured a swing of about 4 per cent against him in the seat — not enough for him to lose it, but enough to make his previously safe electorate marginal.
Labor was so concerned about the possible impact of Mr Daley's comments in Kogarah they took out a front-page advertisement in a Chinese-language newspaper to clarify them.
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