Australian Affordable Housing Party

http://dbpedia.org/resource/Australian_Affordable_Housing_Party an entity of type: Thing

The Australian Affordable Housing Party was an Australian political party registered with the Australian Electoral Commission for federal elections in Australia. Its first election contest was in the 2017 Bennelong by-election. The party's registration was announced to the public as an exclusive by News.com.au journalist Benedict Brook on 24 August 2017. rdf:langString
rdf:langString Australian Affordable Housing Party
rdf:langString Australian Affordable Housing Party
rdf:langString Australian Affordable Housing Party
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rdf:langString Purple
rdf:langString Australia
rdf:langString Andrew Potts
xsd:integer 130
rdf:langString Anthony Ziebell
rdf:langString The Australian Affordable Housing Party was an Australian political party registered with the Australian Electoral Commission for federal elections in Australia. Its first election contest was in the 2017 Bennelong by-election. The party's registration was announced to the public as an exclusive by News.com.au journalist Benedict Brook on 24 August 2017. The party's leader and lead Senate candidate for NSW is Andrew Potts, a former newspaper editor and opinion columnist and the executive and associate producer of two Australian feature films, The Dream Children (2015) and Mongolian Bling (2012). The party's president and second announced Senate candidate for NSW is Anthony Ziebell, a tenants rights activist and owner of the website DontRentMe.com - a service which allows renters to review bad landlords and property managers. Ziebell has appeared on several episodes of Channel 9's A Current Affair program and has been interviewed by a large range of other media. After the High Court ruled that the Nationals MP and Deputy Prime Minister Barnaby Joyce was ineligible to have been elected to the Australian Parliament, the New England byelection was called. The party announced that Potts would stand for the seat. He secured the number three spot on the ballot paper for the election in which seventeen candidates were running, outpolling six other candidates and finishing just 23 votes behind the Sustainable Australia candidate. The party announced on 16 November that Ziebell would contest the Bennelong byelection after sitting member John Alexander resigned his seat, fearing that the High Court might also find him ineligible. Twelve candidates contested the election and Ziebell outpolled four of those candidates.
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