Tim Quilty
Timothy Jamin Quilty is an Australian politician. He was a Liberal Democratic Party member of the Victorian Legislative Council between 2018 and 2022, representing Northern Victoria Region. He was not successful in his re-election to the Legislative Council in the 2022 state election.
Before his election to parliament, he served as a councillor on the City of Wodonga, previously contesting the Division of Indi for the LDP in the 2016 Australian federal election, as well as the seats of Eden-Monaro in 2007 and Riverina in 2010. He had previously contested Eden-Monaro as a member of the Outdoor Recreation Party in 2004. Prior to entering politics, Quilty was a farmer and an accountant.
Quilty's inaugural speech on 19 February 2019, gained attention for advocating a "Rexit", proposing that rural areas of Victoria and New South Wales separate from urban-dominated governments to form a new state, arguing that city-based policies disadvantaged regional communities. He later released maps in 2021 outlining a proposed "super state" combining regional parts of Victoria, New South Wales, and potentially Queensland.
In parliament, Quilty held several committee roles:
- Member of the Electoral Matters Committee.
- Participating member of the Legislative Council Legal and Social Issues Committee.
- Participating member of the Legislative Council * Environment and Planning Committee.
- Member of the Legislative Council Economy and Infrastructure Committee.
- Opposing extensions of lockdown powers during the COVID-19 pandemic, stating in a 2021 speech, "Let me be entirely clear, I don't trust you with these powers."
- Raising concerns about a privacy breach in legislation allowing access to private medical information in 2022.
- Questioning the disappearance of 60,000 rounds of ammunition from Victoria Police in 2022.
- Supporting animal welfare by backing "Grunt the pig," a local case involving a pet pig facing council restrictions.
- Commenting on defamation laws in Australia, arguing they do not balance reputation rights with free speech.
- Being the only Victorian MP to vote against a 2022 bill banning the public display of Nazi swastikas.
- Voting against the Treaty Authority and Other Treaty Elements Bill 2022, related to Indigenous treaty processes.