NATIONALS leader David Littleproud has vowed to make Calare a priority ahead of the 2025 federal election and has revealed the hunt to find the party's candidate for the region is in the works.
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The Nationals won the seat of Calare when the region went to the polls in May 2022, but elected MP Andrew Gee left the party and became an independent in a shock move only about six months later.
In Orange on Wednesday after a trip to the flood-impacted community of Eugowra, Mr Littleproud said he was still baffled by Mr Gee's decision to defect from the Nationals, but conceded "that's democracy".
![Federal Nationals leader David Littleproud in Orange on Wednesday. Picture by Nick McGrath Federal Nationals leader David Littleproud in Orange on Wednesday. Picture by Nick McGrath](/images/transform/v1/crop/frm/GHcbaSNijNeVS4SULWDX8n/bbb8b446-3800-4660-a7aa-6e7ed1f72616.jpg/r0_0_4032_2267_w1200_h678_fmax.jpg)
"We would have liked him obviously to continue on with us, but that's a decision he's made; we respect that," Mr Littleproud said.
"But that doesn't mean we won't be contesting Calare. We'll be taking it very seriously.
"This is business, and I made that clear to him. I like him ... unfortunately, I want to beat him."
We'll be taking it very seriously.
- Nationals leader David Littleproud.
Mr Gee hasn't shied away from taking pot-shots at the current state of the Nationals. He believes he was "muzzled" when it came to his contrasting position on the proposed Voice to Parliament.
He's said previously the party is "run by an ever-shrinking circle of people and has lost touch with its once mighty base and our communities".
Mr Gee took another shot at his former party late on Wednesday after learning Mr Littleproud was in his electorate.
The leader of the Nationals confirmed he and Mr Gee were not planning on meeting as Mr Littleproud made his way through the electorate en route to Mudgee.
"It was interesting to hear that federal Nationals' leader David Littleproud has been in Eugowra," Mr Gee said in a statement.
The flood disaster in Eugowra occurred on November 14 and Mr Littleproud's first visit to the region was Wednesday, "almost eight months later", Mr Gee pointed out.
"For the party that says it represents the people of regional Australia, that's an extraordinarily long time," he said.
"While I welcome him to our electorate, the question has to be asked why it has taken almost eight months for him to visit our disaster-hit communities to express his concern?
"I suspect that for a lot of residents still picking up the pieces from this traumatic time, his visit will be a case of way too little, way too late."
![David Littleproud with Cabonne Shire mayor Kevin Beatty in Eugowra. Picture supplied. David Littleproud with Cabonne Shire mayor Kevin Beatty in Eugowra. Picture supplied.](/images/transform/v1/crop/frm/GHcbaSNijNeVS4SULWDX8n/354cb5a0-f86a-4c2e-a047-3d5dc45546ca.jpg/r0_300_4088_2607_w1200_h678_fmax.jpg)
Mr Littleproud indicated his trip to Eugowra was a positive one and the community was upbeat about its position eight months on from the flood disaster that crippled parts of the Cabonne Shire in late 2022.
He conceded, though, that there is still much to do to get villages like Eugowra back up on their feet.
He believes that recovery would be accelerated with the Coalition back in government, and indicated the process to select a new Nationals candidate for Calare was about to begin.
He said the party was determined to make sure the candidate selected "is local, is connected to the community and is one that has demonstrated that already to the electorate".
There's a redistribution in the works for NSW, though, which will shift some electoral boundaries, and once that takes place Mr Littleproud said the process would "amplify".
"Again, look at our record, look at what the people of Calare got when you had a federal Nationals member," Mr Littleproud said.
"That will translate again when we're back in government."