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Better Australia

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Grassroots advocacy group in Australia

Better Australia
Formation2024; 1 year ago (2024)
PurposeAnti-Greens and anti-teal campaigning
HeadquartersSydney, Australia
Websitewww.betteraustralia.org

Better Australia is an Australian political advocacy group established in the lead-up to the2025 Australian federal election to campaign againstteal independents and theAustralian Greens.

History

[edit]

The group was first formed as Better Council in 2024.[1] The group campaigned in the2024 New South Wales local elections, opposing thepro-Palestine stances taken byGreens councillors. Group spokesperson Sophie Calland, a member of theLabor Party, argued that local politicians should focus on their own communities, rather than spending “valuable time and resources” debating “international issues likeGaza”, in reference to aRandwick Council meeting about theIsrael-Palestine conflict that cost taxpayers an estimated $13,000.[2][1]

2024 local elections

[edit]

Better Council focused their efforts on three council areas inSydney'sEastern Suburbs, —Woollahra,Waverley andRandwick — home to nearly half of Australia'sJewish population.[1] Their campaign contributed to significant swings against the Greens in all three municipalities, resulting in the loss of three seats.[a][3]

2025 federal election

[edit]

Rebranding as Better Australia, the group began campaigning in the months before the2025 federal election, with ad tracking data showed Better Australia spent $373,209 on social media advertising from March 28 to May 3 of 2025.[4]

Spokesperson Sophie Calland toldthe Guardian that Better Australia’s campaign is non-partisan, and that “[w]e are not advocating for a particular major party but against the Greens, teals and other minor party candidates across the country.” JournalistWendy Bacon claimed that the group was receiving campaigning advice from formerLiberal staffers and strategists, while Calland herself is a registered member of theLabor Party.[4][5]

Better Australia ran an extensive campaign againstteal candidates, focusing onWentworth in Sydney andGoldstein in Melbourne, as well as targeting Greens-held seats includingBrisbane andMelbourne. TealZoe Daniel lost re-election, as did three of the four sitting Greens MPs, including party leaderAdam Bandt.[4] The group claimed responsibility for the results, saying that their ads were seen over 43 million times in 13 target 13 seats.[6]

In late April, 2025,The Sydney Morning Herald said that Better Australia were reported to theAustralian Electoral Commission due to the resemblance between the yellow vests worn by the group's volunteers while handing out anti-teal pamphlets in theindependent-held seat ofKooyong, and the official yellow vests worn by election workers. The AEC told the newspaper that because the group's vests feature a Better Australia logo, no rules were broken.[7] Rachel Dexter, a journalist writing forthe Herald, suggested that Better Australia's vest design was an attempt to confuse voters.[7]

Notes

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  1. ^Central Ward in Randwick, Lawson Ward in Waverley, and Cooper Ward in Woollahra

References

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  1. ^abcMcLeod, Catie; Rachwani, Mostafa (10 September 2024)."Roads, rates, rubbish – and war? How foreign conflict could influence NSW's local council elections".The Guardian. Retrieved21 October 2025.
  2. ^"Revealed: The huge bill for Randwick ratepayers for council to debate Gaza".The Daily Telegraph. Retrieved22 October 2025.
  3. ^"Waverley Council election results - Waverley Council".Waverley. Retrieved21 October 2025.
  4. ^abcCanales, Sarah Basford; Belot, Henry (9 May 2025)."'We have destroyed the Greens': third-party groups spent millions on ads to influence Australian voters. Some claim it worked".The Guardian. Retrieved21 October 2025.
  5. ^Bacon, Wendy; Aharon, Yaakov (22 April 2025)."Dark Money: Labor and Liberal join forces in attacks on Teals and Greens".Michael West Media. Retrieved21 October 2025.
  6. ^"Better Australia Campaign | Stronger Choices. For a Better Australia | Federal election 2025".Better Australia. Retrieved21 October 2025.
  7. ^abDexter, Cara Waters, Clay Lucas, Charlotte Grieve, Rachael (3 May 2025)."Far-right agitators turn up to pre-poll voting booth in Brighton; Safi's NDIS business faces watchdog probe: Victoria's hot seats week 5 as it happened".The Sydney Morning Herald. Retrieved22 October 2025.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
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