If you have followed politics for a while, you know how it works. In the final days before an election, when most voters have made up their minds and time is too short to explain the full story, opponents throw mud. It doesn’t have to be accurate. It just has to plant doubt.
That is exactly what has happened in Kiama this week.
Headlines in the Daily Telegraph , a Rupert Murdoch-owned tabloid well known for sensationalism, have suggested that Kate Dezarnaulds praised disgraced former MP Gareth Ward, even as he begins serving his sentence. What those headlines left out was the context and the truth.
What Kate actually said
Kate has always been clear about her views on Gareth Ward. Back in 2023, when he was re-elected while facing serious charges, she said she was ashamed Kiama had returned him to parliament. She was threatened with legal action over that comment, but she stood by it.
More recently, in conversation with voters and journalists, she acknowledged something many in Kiama have said themselves: that Ward had a reputation for being responsive and available when people contacted his office. In Kate’s own words, “both things can be true at the same time” that someone can be diligent in parts of their professional role while also losing all trust because of their personal conduct and criminal conviction.
That is not praise, it is honesty. It reflects what people in Kiama have told her as she has knocked on doors and held conversations across the community. Pretending otherwise is misleading.
Why the story is surfacing now
The timing says everything. This controversy has been dredged up in the final days before the by-election because Kate’s conservative opponents are worried. They know her campaign has momentum, and that voters are tired of party politics and are open to electing a strong independent voice.
When political operatives are nervous, they fall back on the oldest tactic in the book: take comments out of context, make them sound worse than they are, and amplify them through friendly media outlets. The Daily Telegraph is owned by Rupert Murdoch and he is no stranger to running last-minute attack stories when independents or community-backed candidates are gaining ground.
What matters most
The real story here is not about Gareth Ward. It is about Kiama’s future.
Kate Dezarnaulds has:
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spoken up with courage when others stayed silent, even when she was threatened legally for criticising Ward’s re-election,
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spent months listening to locals about what matters most to them,
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and built strong connections with sitting independents in parliament, who are already delivering results for their communities.
This by-election is not about defending the past. It is about who we trust to represent Kiama now and into the future.
A distraction, nothing more
When you see a headline like this in the final hours of a campaign, remember: it is a tactic. It is designed to distract from the real issues, to muddy the waters, and to make voters second-guess themselves.
The truth is simple. Kate Dezarnaulds has been consistent: she was ashamed of Kiama’s re-election of Ward, she acknowledges the reality of what locals have said about his work ethic, and she has always been clear that his actions have disqualified him from trust and public service.
What her opponents are really afraid of is not her words about the past. It is her commitment to the future.
#KiamaVotes #MurdochMedia #Independents #CommunityFirst #MediaPower #DoingPoliticsDifferently #PeopleBeforePolitics















