Source: Free Pik
Over six years ago, a group of us proposed a new kind of political party — one that guaranteed its elected members would vote in Parliament according to the wishes of their local communities.
This “umbrella party for independents,” called Independents CAN (historically born from Climate Action Now and Independents for Climate Action Now), was designed to protect what Australians value about true independent representation — local accountability, community-chosen candidates, and freedom from rigid party ideology — while delivering the benefits of coordinated influence in Parliament.
Despite its promise, the idea was rejected by some as incompatible with the identity of being an “independent.” But with another election behind us, and many talented independent candidates again falling short of real parliamentary power, it’s time to revisit this idea with fresh eyes.
To win influence, we need scale. And to gain scale, we need structure.
A party of independents — one that is accountable to communities, free from dogma, and committed to fairness, integrity and evidence-based policy — could provide a home for many including disaffected Liberal voters, unrepresented centrists, and Australians tired of ideological trench warfare.
Such a party could:
It would be unlike anything Australia has seen — and exactly what many voters are crying out for.
The Liberal Party is no longer a reliable home for moderates. Labor remains structurally tied to union interests. Minor parties are too narrow or extreme. The vacuum in the centre of Australian politics is real — and dangerous.
The idea of building a party that reflects the evolving centre is not utopian. It’s practical. It’s what most Australians want: good governance, accountability, and honest leadership.
Here’s how such a party might position itself — not as left or right, but as a coalition of common sense:
Electrify our energy system — cheaper and cleaner. (Centre-left)
Reform capital gains and negative gearing. (Left)
Break up monopolies to restore consumer choice. (Left)
Balance the budget without gutting health and education. (Centre)
The common thread? These are positions held by many Australians, not all, and we respect that! They’re not ideological extremes — just practical, evidence-based solutions. By adopting the best ideas from across the spectrum, this party would naturally land in the centre.
To those who ask if a party of independents is even possible, consider this:
Founded in 2013, The Alternative (*Alternativet*) engages voters through “political laboratories” — forums for shaping policy collaboratively. MPs aren’t bound by a party whip but guided by community consensus. They’ve shown structure and independence can coexist.
We have just three years to prepare. Let’s not waste it by clinging to purity or rejecting structure. It’s time for many of us to come together — not to conform, but to collaborate.
Let’s build it now and electrify the nation in more ways than one!
Oliver Yates is a clean energy specialist and an original Teal for 2019 Kooyong campaign.
Claims and promises of carbon offset schemes are falling deep into the category of being…
Australia has just experienced its worst heatwave in six years but it's set to become…
There will be daily cap on the federal government's Shared Solar free power offer, to…
Developer of what was once hailed as the biggest solar hybrid project cuts PV component…
Fortescue wind technology company says its turbines will be the "tallest, mightiest and the widest,"…
Rooftop solar reaches remarkable 117 pct of state demand in Australia's most advanced renewable state,…