WATCH: Faceless Dan is NOWHERE to be seen in Mulgrave

There's signs of change happening outside the early polling centre on Premier Dan Andrews' home turf

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While 13 challengers for Dan Andrews' local seat of Mulgrave lobbied voters outside an early polling centre this week, the Victorian Premier himself was nowhere to be seen.

While Andrews was missing in action and his sole volunteer was struggling to comprehend his actions in government, other candidates were busy talking to voters and taking selfies with locals.

Independent Ian Cook, who decided to run against Andrews after the government shut down his catering business when a suspicious slug was reportedly found on his premises, said there was “an outpouring” of anger against Andrews from local constituents.

“All I can tell you is people coming through are shaking my hand and saying, ‘yes we are voting for you’,” he said.

“When I decided to do this, I thought a few people might know my story and if I can turn it into a few votes and make it harder for him (Andrews) then that’s a good thing, but it’s just turned into a flood.

“I think what you’re seeing here is an outpouring of ‘we want to get rid of this man and hold him responsible for everything he has done’.”

Cook said it was telling that his election signs seemed to outnumber those of Andrews six to one.

“I think there’s a level of embarrassment,” he said of Andrews’ lack of signage.

Liberal candidate Michael Piastrino said most of the candidates cared less about which of them won the seat than they did about the overall objective of unseating the Victorian Premier.

“I just think no one wants to see his face anymore,” Piastrino said. “He needs to buy a one-way ticket out of Australia and never come back again.”

A solitary Dan Andrews volunteer handing out how to vote cards for the Premier said she did not know where the man responsible for the world’s longest Covid lockdown was.

“Maybe he is busy somewhere,” she told me.

When I asked if Andrews might be embarrassed to show his face to voters she replied: “Not sure. I don’t know.”

Andrews’ volunteer said she supported his harsh lockdown policy and boasted that she had been vaccinated and boosted four times. But she was surprised when I told her that vaccination had been mandatory.

“I don’t think it was forced,” she said.

When I explained that people had been banned from going to work without getting vaccinated she replied: “Oh really?”

 

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  • By Avi Yemini

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