Nicolette Boele
Nicolette Boele is an Australian independent politician who has been the federal member of parliament for Bradfield since 2025.
Boele has a background in finance and renewable energy and has held executive roles in organisations such as the Responsible Investment Association Australasia, the Investor Group on Climate Change, and the Clean Energy Finance Corporation. She contested the 2022 federal election for the Division of Bradfield as a community independent and successfully ran again in 2025.
Early life
The daughter of Dutch migrants, Boele attended Gordon East Primary School, Killara High School, and completed an undergraduate management degree at the University of Technology Sydney. She also holds a graduate certificate in environment and science from Oxford Brookes University.Career
Boele has held a range of roles across the renewable energy, environment, and sustainable finance sectors.From 1996 to 1999, she was program leader for energy efficiency at the Sustainable Energy Development Authority of New South Wales, followed by her position as Sustainable Cities and Industries Campaign Coordinator at the Australian Conservation Foundation from 2000 to 2003. She then served as senior program and policy officer at the NSW Department of Environment, Climate Change and Water from 2003 to 2004, and later as director of strategic projects at the Climate Institute from 2006 to 2008. Between 2009 and 2015, Boele worked as principal for climate change at Banarra, and during that time also acted as chief of external affairs at the Clean Energy Finance Corporation from 2012 to 2013. She subsequently managed the Low Carbon Investment Registry at the Investor Group on Climate Change in 2014, and from 2015 to 2021 served as executive manager at Responsible Investment Association Australasia. Boele was an advisory board member at the Good Car Company and an expert adviser on electrification at the Smart Energy Council.
Political career
2022 election campaign
In the 2022 Australian federal election, Boele contested the Division of Bradfield as a community independent candidate. She officially launched her campaign on 30 January 2022. She positioned herself as an advocate for climate action, political integrity and an affordable economy.Following the election, she achieved a significant swing of 12.3 percentage points against the incumbent Liberal MP, Paul Fletcher, reducing his margin to 4.2 percentage points, the largest first preference swing against a sitting Liberal member in the 2022 election. Following this, Boele established a "shadow representative's office" to continue her advocacy within the community and announced she would run again in 2025.
2025 election campaign
On 10 October 2024, the electoral boundaries of Bradfield were redistributed. The neighbouring seat of North Sydney was abolished, and most of its electors were transferred to Bradfield. This reduced the incumbent MP Paul Fletcher's margin to 2.5 percentage points. Fletcher announced in December 2024 that he would not seek re-election and retire from politics.Boele ran again in the 2025 federal election against Liberal candidate Gisele Kapterian, with her campaign endorsed by the outgoing independent MP for North Sydney, Kylea Tink.
Boele amassed over 1,450 volunteers across the electorate, who collecitvely knocked on 30,000 doors to understand the priorities of local residents.
Boele appeared in multiple forums, including the 1MW #SheVotes Bradfield Community Forum, alongside Kapterian and other Bradfield candidates; the NSW Jewish Board of Deputies Bradfield Federal Election Community Debate, alongside Kapterian and other Bradfield candidates; the Australia Hong Kong Link Australia Election Bradfield Forum, alongside Kapterian, independent Andy Yin and a spokesperson for the Greens candidate Harjit Singh; an Australian Conservation Foundation event in St Ives with Greens candidate Singh and Louise McCallum of the Labor Party; Boele also attended an event hosted by the Ku-ring-gai Chamber of Commerce along with Kapterian, Yin, McCallum and Martin Cousins who was representing Greens candidate Singh.
The count for the election was extremely close. On election night, the ABC had projected that Boele might gain the seat, but almost a week later, postal votes changed the trajectory of the votes, resulting in the ABC calling the seat for Kapterian. Declaration votes shifted the momentum once again, returning the seat to "in doubt" status. On 19 May, Boele was leading in the provisional count before the full distribution of preferences took place, beating Kapterian by 39 votes. The Australian Electoral Commission then undertook an official and full distribution of preferences, eliminating Boele's lead and leaving both candidates with an equal vote count of 56,190. By the end of the full distribution of preferences, Kapterian was in the lead by just eight votes, automatically triggering a recount.
Upon the completion of the AEC's recount, Boele was elected by a margin of 26 votes against Liberal candidate Kapterian. This makes it the most marginal seat in the nation.