Australia’s compulsory and preferential voting system has long fostered centrist politics, yet voters increasingly gravitate toward the fringes out of frustration rather than preference. This shift highlights a deepening divide between the establishment and everyday workers who feel neglected by major parties.
Neglect of the Working Middle Class
The working middle class now embodies the anti-establishment force, sidelined by institutional giants focused on internal issues rather than bold reforms. Australia lacks a dynamic, reformist government, leaving citizens torn between entrenched power and ineffective leadership.
Mortlock’s Break from the Liberals
After years attempting internal reforms within the Liberal Party, Charlotte Mortlock has left both the party and her organization, Hilma’s Network, designed to draw women into Liberal politics. She expresses exhaustion with traditional approaches amid widespread demand for fresh options.
Voters prioritize practical solutions over ideological labels, rejecting the left-right divide. Mortlock launches Something Better Australia as a foundation for a new major party, emphasizing grassroots input over closed-door policy-making.
Building from the Ground Up
The initiative invites politically disillusioned Australians to co-create the platform, consulting industry experts free from factional influences. Major parties craft policies in secrecy before public pitches, but this model reverses that process.
Signs of Voter Discontent
The 2022 teal independents served as a gentle warning, while One Nation’s recent gains deliver a sharper rebuke. Labor’s declining primary vote reflects dissatisfaction with cautious, small-target strategies despite its majority.
Grievance politics draws support amid economic disparities: 2025 saw 340 new global billionaires, yet Australian real wages and disposable income stagnate. Wealth concentrates among the capital-rich, trapping workers in stagnation.
Call for Radical Ambition
Societies falter when economies fail ordinary workers, fueling inequality and eroding social cohesion. Leaders avoid bold action—those in power fear defeat, opponents dismiss introspection. Nostalgia for past eras offers no fix for AI-driven challenges.
Australians in 2026 demand politics with radical intent, ambition, and resolve—not ideology. Mortlock, a former Sky News journalist and Hilma’s Network founder, positions Something Better Australia to channel this energy into effective governance.

