ACT Legislative Assembly
Mulcahy entered the Legislative Assembly in 2004 as a Member of the Liberal Party. A strong campaign resulted in the highest vote of all Liberal candidates in the electorate of Molonglo. He easily out-polled current Liberal Leader Zed Seselja and was seen instantly by members of the public and media as a candidate for the Liberal leadership. Mulcahy was appointed to the Shadow Treasury position.
In May 2006, Bill Stefaniak replaced Brendan Smyth as the ACT Leader of the Opposition in a coup engineered by Mulcahy. In return Richard Mulcahy was appointed as Deputy Leader – a position he held until another party room coup in November 2007.
Throughout his time in the Liberal Party serious tensions existed between two factions – those loyal to former Leader Brendan Smyth, whose leadership had seen the party crash to a devastating defeat in the 2004 ACT election, and those loyal to Mulcahy.
In December 2007, Richard Mulcahy was removed from the front bench on the basis of unsubstantiated allegations made against him that were later dismissed in a Court judgement handed down in February 2008. He responded angrily and contemptuously at the behaviour of his colleagues and was expelled from the Parliamentary Party at the behest of the Smyth led faction. The expulsion was unanimous, with former Mulcahy supporters Seselja and Dunne supporting his removal. He subsequently resigned from the lay Liberal Party to serve as an Independent.
His departure left the Party with just six seats in the Assembly and in a precarious position ahead of the October 2008 election.
The Liberal Party infighting and unpleasantness associated with Mulcahy wore some of the blame for the Party's poor showing at the 2008 ACT Election. While Mulcahy did not come close to regaining his seat, the Liberals were not able to claim it back - rather an unheralded Greens candidate was elected. The current Liberal representation in the ACT Legislative Assembly is six. Mr Zed Seselja, Mr Smyth, Ms Dunne, Mr Hanson, Mr Coe and Mr Doszpot. Media reports had widely dismissed the Liberal Party's chances of obtaining Government in the 2008 ACT Election.
Mulcahy failed to retain his seat at the election, recording only 2057 votes despite spending $56,455 on his campaign. After his expulsion in 2007 he had remained in the Assembly as a Member of the eponymous Richard Mulcahy Canberra Party, but his aim of contesting the next election as a new force in ACT politics proved to be over ambitious.
Read more about this topic: Richard Mulcahy (Australian Politician)
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