Seniors United Party of Australia | |
Colours: | Grey Red Blue |
Colorcode: |
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President: | Bob Patrech |
General Secretary: | Bob Burdett |
Spokesperson: | Bob Patrech |
Ideology: | Pensioners' interests |
Headquarters: | Wollongong |
Country: | Australia |
The Seniors United Party of Australia (SUPA) was an Australian political party.[1] It was known as Seniors United NSW until 3 March 2016.[2] The party was founded by Ray Morritt, Nick Agnew, Frank Fitzpatrick and Neil Smith who were dissatisfied with the NSW Government's legislation on retirement villages and other seniors issues.[3] The party was deregistered by the AEC on 29 June 2022.[4]
Other parties have previously competed under a similar name in Australian elections. NSW MLC Beryl Evans formed The Seniors, the Seniors Party ran candidates in the 2001 Western Australian state election, and a group called 'Seniors' contested the 1999 New South Wales state election. None of them had any electoral success.[5] [6]
The Seniors United Party's first three candidates were in the 2016 federal election to represent New South Wales in the Australian Senate. The candidates were Gillian Evans, Kerry Koliadis and Chris Osborne.[7] Evans was ranked as the 26th candidate out of 151 and the party ranked 17th out of 41 groups on the New South Wales Senate ballot paper, counting only first preferences.[8]
The party fielded a candidate in the 2017 New England by-election. Warwick Stacey polled 16th of the 17 candidates, with 0.39% of the vote.[9]
On 7 February 2018, the Australian Electoral Commission (AEC) issued a notice that it was considering deregistering the party on the grounds that it had ceased to have at least 500 members.[10] In May 2018 the AEC approved the party to continue its registration after the party requested and was granted a 2nd membership review which it passed.
In October 2018 the party merged with the Pensioners, Veterans & Seniors Party.
The party was de-registered in March 2021 for failing to have 500 members.[11] After an appeal, the party was reregistered in November 2021.
In 2022, New South Wales Legislative Councillor Fred Nile joined the party after the dissolution of the Christian Democratic Party, intending to become the party's first sitting member.[12] However, SUPA was not registered with NSWEC and was deregistered as a federal party less than two months later.[4]