Who is Kellie Sloane, the new NSW Liberal leader - and can this first-term former journalist save the party?

Who is Kellie Sloane, the new NSW Liberal leader - and can this first-term former journalist save the party?
Source: The Guardian

In a video posted to Facebook this week, the ousted New South Wales opposition leader Mark Speakman made a not-so-subtle dig at his challenger Kellie Sloane's credentials.

"We focus so much these days on the performer, not so much on the performance," he said.

It was his last-ditch case for staying on as leader: "boring gets the job done" - with a clear implication about his widely tipped successor.

But when he resigned on Thursday evening, Speakman took a different tone. He acknowledged that the party's survival was under threat and said 52-year-old Sloane would "clear the air".

"She is someone with an enormous, enormous leadership potential."

The former television journalist, chosen unopposed as the Liberal leader on Friday morning, has a reputation for being a good performer and the government has taken notice.

The Sydney Morning Herald analysed parliamentary speeches by the premier, Chris Minns, since March 2023 and found "the member for Vaucluse" was among his most common phrases, uttered more frequently than "public transport". In 18 different speeches, 44 times, Minns took aim: anticipating future battles at the dispatch box and on the campaign trail.

Now Sloane is leader, Minns has one clear line of attack: her relative inexperience in politics.

Speakman himself, during Thursday's last-ditch attempt to head off the challenge, pointedly referred to her as a terrific "first-term" MP.

But in a job where cut-through communication skills are career-defining, Sloane's CV points to potential.

It was the South Australian transplant's on-air ability that brought her to NSW. She grew up and went to a public school in the Barossa Valley, studied an arts degree at the University of South Australia and began her career as an ABC cadet in Adelaide. In 1997 she moved to work as a reporter at Nine in Sydney.

She worked there for 13 years, including a stint as a presenter of the Today program, moving to the late-night news program Nightline in 2009. She left Nine after the show was axed in 2010.

After leaving journalism Sloane worked as a chief executive of educational non-profits beforerunning for Liberal preselection in Willoughby after Gladys Berejiklian, the Coalition's first female Liberal premier and second female leader, resigned in 2021.

She garnered the attention of high-profile Liberals, including the former premier Mike Baird and the former federal treasurer Joe Hockey, though Berejiklian backed the former Willoughby mayor Gail Giles-Gidney.

In a surprise result, moderates Giles-Gidney and Sloane came second and third to a former Tony Abbott staffer, Tim James, who was elected in the 2022 byelection.

James is a member of the party's right faction, aligned with the shadow attorney general Alister Henskens' rival leadership bid this week.

But Sloane's high-profile endorsements speak to her own Liberal connections. Her husband, Adam Connolly, a former News Corp journalist, was an adviser to John Howard.

He now runs Apollo Communications, a corporate communications company which offers a "direct link to journalists and opinion leaders".

The company is not present on either the NSW or federal registers of lobbyists but Sloane may need to make clear any potential conflicts of interest to avoid the lobbying scandals that have dogged many a NSW politician.

Sloane ran for preselection in the eastern suburbs seat of Vaucluse in 2022 with the backing of more Liberal heavyweights, the federal senator and former Wentworth MP Dave Sharma and the local powerbroker Sally Betts, and won.

She took the seat in 2023 by a comfortable margin, moving straight to the opposition frontbench as shadow environment minister, and then to health after Matt Kean resigned in mid-2024.

As shadow health minister she walked the line between holding the government to account and acknowledging the Coalition's role in setting up the disastrous private-public partnership at Northern Beaches hospital, which happened long before she was elected.

As he resigned on Thursday, Speakman said he had dragged the Liberal party "kicking and screaming to an aggressively pro-housing policy" and called on his successor to maintain the commitment.

Sloane, whose electorate includes areas affected by the government's decision to build a train station and up to 10,000 homes at Woollahra, said in 2022 she didn't want residents to be "punished" with more housing.

But she has handled the government's rezoning of the area discreetly, saying she is not opposed to development "in principle" while casting doubt on the government's numbers.

Nowhere were Sloane's opposition-leader-in-waiting qualities more evident than after this month's neo-Nazi rally. Sloane, who took to social media to condemn the event, received a barrage of hateful messages on X, including alleged death threats which she reported to police.

At a press conference convened by Speakman, it was the shadow health minister, not the former opposition leader, to whom journalists directed questions.

"I will not be bullied out of saying what I think, and I will stand up for people in my community and for the broader community of Sydney who don't like hate,"

she said, echoing comments made in countless media appearances that day.

While we wait to hear her policies, Sloane can be expected to take a progressive, media-friendly stance. The mother of teenagers, who has now quit X, posted on Instagram this week advising parents how to navigate the federal government's impending social media ban.

But, like the new Victorian Liberal leader, Jess Wilson, she will need to isolate the state Coalition from federal politics and the struggles engulfing Sussan Ley. Fractures over net zero emissions loom with the Nationals, now led by Gurmesh Singh, which could be disastrous for metropolitan Liberal-held seats.

The Coalition is sitting at a dire 28%, according to the latest Essential poll, which could mean a thumping Labor majority at the March 2027 election.

But the party, and Sloane, had an unlikely booster this week. Asked whom he feared going up against most in 2027, Minns didn't mention the member for Vaucluse but said he had "healthy fear of all of them".

"The Liberal party is formidable."
"Over the last 20 years, they've won more elections than they've lost. Other than 2011, pretty much every election in New South Wales has been close."
"This one will be close too and the last thing I want voters to think is that we're counting our chickens."