How the diabolical federal election result has hit the NSW Liberals
The party, this week, 24 liberal sub -house seats for the entire election of the state election by opening the pre -election, the results of the survey results will probably ring NSW liberals.
The party is also under the control of a management committee headed by former NSW Premier Nick Greiner in the midst of the local government disaster, which the party could not nominate 144 nominations for elections last year.
One of the duties of the management committee is to rewrite the rules as well as developing women’s representation after being elected to the Federal Lower Parliament in the May survey.
The NSW Liberal Party Chamber is much closer to the gender parity than federal colleagues, nine female deputies and 15 men in the lower house. In the upper house, there are more women liberal (six) than men (three).
Speakman said he didn’t want to weigh on the federal party issues, but he believed that the party’s state branch does not need quota because it is close to equal representation.
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Quotas are a separatist issue throughout the party. The Federal Leader Sussan Ley said he would not dictate what any state section should do, but emphasized that more women want to be chosen beforehand.
The RPM survey shows that the highest support for quotas is in NSW and that 34 percent of voters support them in Victoria and 32 percent in Queensland. Nationally, 27 percent of coalition voters revolve quotas, while 44 percent oppose them.
RPM searched 1054 voters between 13-18 July.

