Australia politics live: Monique Ryan and husband Peter Jordan apologise after video showed him removing Liberal campaign sign

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Monique Ryan and husband apologise after video showed him removing Liberal campaign sign

Josh Butler

Kooyong MP Monique Ryan and her husband, Peter Jordan, have apologised after video circulated showing him removing a Liberal campaign sign from a Melbourne yard.

The Nine newspapers first reported a confrontation between Jordan and a Liberal supporter, after Jordan appeared to take exception to a yard sign for Ryan’s Liberal challenger, Amelia Hamer.

The video, also supplied to Guardian Australia by Coalition sources, shows Jordan walking down the street with the large sign, as the person filming the video asks why he took it down.

Jordan replied “because it’s on public land”, and declines to give his identity when asked by the person filming.

In a statement, Jordan said “I unreservedly apologise for removing the sign. It was a mistake.”

I believed the sign was illegally placed but I should have reported my concerns to council.

Ryan, looking to defend her seat from Hamer’s challenge, said in her own statement: “I apologise for the removal of the sign. It should not have happened.”

All concerns around signage should be reported to Council.

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Monique Ryan and husband ‘should know better’, James Paterson says

Liberal senator James Paterson has also weighed in on the yard sign issue, and says Monique Ryan should “front up” to the cameras.

The Victorian senator is on Sky News, and says there should be a clean contest in the seat.

It’s totally inappropriate behaviour … He should know better and she should know better, and this never should have happened in the first place. And I really hope this is a once off. What we want in Kooyong is a clean contest.

Paterson is also asked about the Port of Darwin, which is currently leased by a Chinese company, but many are pushing for it to be returned to public hands.

Landbridge acquired a 99-year lease of the Darwin Port in 2015, while Scott Morrison was federal treasurer. Paterson says:

I think it should be returned to Australian ownership, and I hope that happens very soon.

I think there was a range of failures of the system at the time, and I publicly said repeatedly it was a mistake [for the] Territory government to release it. But because it was a lease, and because it was a Territory government [entity], not a private entity, it just fell through the cracks.

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