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Gareth Ward
Gareth Ward
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Gareth James Ward is an Australian former politician and convicted criminal. Ward resigned from parliament in 2025 following a conviction for sexual assault. He was a member of the New South Wales Legislative Assembly and represented the seat of Kiama on the South Coast from 2011 to 2025, serving as New South Wales Minister for Families, Communities and Disability Services in the second Berejiklian ministry from 2019 to 2021.[2][3]

Key Information

He was suspended from the New South Wales parliament in March 2022 until the end of his term in March 2023, after being charged with sexual intercourse without consent, and three counts of indecent assault.[4] He was convicted of all four counts in July 2025.[5] Ward resigned from parliament on 8 August 2025 shortly before a vote on his expulsion from parliament following the guilty verdict in his trial.[6] This triggered a by-election in Kiama.[7] He was sentenced to five years and nine months in prison.

Early life

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Ward was born c. 1981[8] in the Illawarra region and completed his schooling at Bomaderry High School. Ward was born with albinism and is legally blind.[9][10] He holds degrees in commerce and arts from the University of Wollongong and Bachelor of Laws from the University of New England, and a Master of Laws from the University of Sydney. He holds a Graduate Diploma in Legal Practice from the Australian National University, and is an Admitted Solicitor in the Supreme Court of NSW and the High Court of Australia.[11] From 2001 to 2006, Ward was on the Council of the Wollongong Undergraduate Students' Association at the university, and was involved with the Australian Liberal Students Federation.

Political career

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Local government

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On 27 March 2004, Ward was elected to the Shoalhaven City Council as an independent councillor representing the northern parts of Shoalhaven. He was re-elected on 13 September 2008 and became deputy mayor in the same month.[12] Ward was a councillor on Shoalhaven City Council from 2004 until 2012.[13]

Liberal MP

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On 12 April 2010, Ward was preselected as the Liberal candidate for Kiama. It was reported that he gained preselection in a 20–12 vote against the previous candidate, Ann Sudmalis.[14] At the 2011 state election, Ward was elected with a swing of 19.4 points and won the seat with 57.5 per cent of the vote on a two-party basis.[15] Ward's main opponent was the incumbent sitting Labor member and former Minister, Matt Brown.

In April 2015, Ward was appointed as Parliamentary Secretary for the Illawarra and South Coast after Premier Mike Baird abolished the former position of Minister for the Illawarra.[16] In March 2017, Ward was appointed as the Parliamentary Secretary for Education.[17] Ward retained his existing responsibilities as the Parliamentary Secretary for the Illawarra and South Coast. Ward served as Parliamentary Secretary for Education, in addition to his role as the Parliamentary Secretary for the Illawarra and South Coast from 2017 until 2019.

In September 2017 Ward claimed to have been the target of an attempted mugging in New York City while staying at the Intercontinental Hotel.[18] Ward claimed to have booked a male masseur for a massage, which was reported as a "special massage". In conflicting reports, it was claimed he "called a phone number provided by an acquaintance",[19] but others maintained that he ordered "the massage online from an outside service".[20] When two men turned up and announced that both of them were minors, Ward told them to leave. He then claimed the duo became aggressive and demanded US$1000 before they would leave. While luring the men down to the lobby under the guise of retrieving money from an ATM, Ward alerted hotel staff and the men fled. CCTV images were circulated but no arrests have been made.[21]

In September 2018, Ward was described in federal parliament by his fellow Liberal colleague, Ann Sudmalis, as leading a campaign of "bullying, betrayal and backstabbing" against her while she was a representative. The allegations were expanded to include branch stacking of local Liberal branches, and installing people hostile to Sudmalis on her electoral committee. She described his determination as to "annihilate anyone who opposed him" with his motivation being "Gareth's narcissistic revenge". Sudmalis went on to accuse him of misogynistic behaviour and raised several examples of where he had actively opposed and campaigned against female Liberals on the South Coast.[22]

Following the 2019 state election Ward was appointed as Minister for Families, Communities and Disability Services in the Second Berejiklian ministry.[3][23][24]

Independent

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In February 2023 he announced that he would be contesting his seat as an independent at the 2023 state election, "to stand up for the principles and values that are worth fighting for".[25]

Ward was narrowly elected as an independent in the 2023 New South Wales state election, suffering a 10.7% swing against him.[26] The NSW government decided to follow the advice of parliament's privileges and ethics committee not to extend Ward's suspension into his new term.[27]

In July 2024, Ward arrived at Parliament House at 4 am to retrieve his spare house keys after locking himself out of his apartment at Potts Point. He denied being drunk or wearing only underwear.[28] Premier Chris Minns asked for a full explanation.[29]

On 5 August 2025, Ward was granted an injunction that prevented the New South Wales Parliament from trying to expel him from the Legislative Assembly.[30][31] The injunction order was revoked following an appeal by the state government.[32][33]

On 8 August 2025, shortly before an expulsion vote in the Legislative Assembly, Ward resigned from his position as member for Kiama, triggering a by-election for the seat.[6]

Sexual abuse charges

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On 14 May 2021 Ward resigned from his portfolio and moved to the crossbench after identifying himself as the state MP subject to an inquiry by the child abuse and sex crimes squad of the New South Wales Police Force.[34] Ward has denied the allegations.[35][36]

On 22 March 2022 Ward was charged with three counts of indecent assault, one count of sexual intercourse without consent, and one alternate charge of common assault. He allegedly indecently assaulted an 18-year-old man at Meroo Meadow in February 2013 and sexually abused a 24-year-old man in Sydney in September 2015. Ward was granted conditional bail to appear at Port Kembla Local Court on 18 May. The then-NSW Premier, Dominic Perrottet, called for his resignation from Parliament and said that if Ward did not resign, the government would move a motion to remove him from parliament.[37] On 24 March 2022, Ward was suspended from parliament after a motion to do so was passed unanimously in the Legislative Assembly.[38] On 19 August 2022, Ward was committed to stand trial for sexual and indecent assault.[39][40]

Trial

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Ward's trial commenced in the Downing Centre District Court on 27 May 2025 before Judge Kara Shead. Ward pleaded not guilty to the three charges against him.[41] On 25 July, Ward was found guilty of sexually abusing two men after a nine-week trial.[5]

On 31 July, Ward filed defamation proceedings in the NSW District Court against radio station 2SM over comments made by broadcaster John Laws prior to his criminal trial.[42]

On 31 October 2025, Ward was sentenced to five years and nine months in prison, with a non-parole sentence of three years and nine months.[43]

References

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Further reading

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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Gareth James Ward (born 28 June 1981) is a former Australian politician who represented the in the from 2011 to 2025. Initially elected as a Liberal Party member, Ward rose through party ranks after joining the Shoalhaven Young Liberals at age 16, serving in leadership roles such as president from 2000 to 2009 before entering parliament. During the Berejiklian Liberal government, he held the position of Parliamentary Secretary for the Illawarra and South Coast, focusing on regional development in his electorate. In 2021, amid police investigations into historical sexual assault allegations, Ward resigned from the Liberal Party and his ministerial role but retained his seat as an independent, securing re-election in 2023. Ward, a qualified solicitor admitted to the Supreme Court of New South Wales, was convicted in July 2025 of sexually assaulting two men in separate incidents in 2013 and 2015, charges that included rape; he has appealed the verdict while awaiting sentencing. His refusal to resign immediately after prompted parliamentary moves toward expulsion, which he preempted by stepping down in August 2025, ending a career marked by early promise as a regional overshadowed by legal for predatory conduct.

Early life and education

Family and upbringing

Gareth Ward was born on 28 June 1981 in , into a small-business family in the region. He was born with , a genetic condition causing reduced pigmentation and legal blindness due to and . Medical professionals in the early advised Ward's parents to confine him indoors and away from to protect his sensitive skin and eyes, reflecting limited understanding of at the time. His parents disregarded such counsel, instead fostering resilience by encouraging outdoor activities and independence, though teachers similarly dismissed his potential, informing the family that "he won’t amount to much." Ward was raised in regional New South Wales, spending much of his childhood in Bomaderry on the South Coast, where his working parents provided opportunities despite financial constraints typical of small-business households. He endured bullying over his appearance and physical limitations, such as difficulty participating in sports, but benefited from protective family and friends, and developed strengths in swimming, rising to high school sports house captain by Year 10. These experiences shaped his emphasis on self-reliance, as he later adapted to vision impairments through enlarged materials and peer assistance during schooling at Bomaderry High School.

Academic and professional background

Ward attended Nowra East Public School and Bomaderry Primary School for his before completing his at Bomaderry High School, where he obtained his Higher School Certificate. He pursued tertiary studies at the , earning a and a in 2007. Ward later obtained a from the University of New England, a from the , and a in Legal Practice from the Australian . Prior to entering state parliament, Ward qualified as a solicitor, gaining admission to the of and the , and became a member of the Law Society of . His legal qualifications positioned him for a potential career in , though he pursued political involvement from an early age, including roles in the Liberal Party's youth and state structures starting in the late 1990s.

Political career

Local government service

Ward served as a councillor on the Kiama Municipal Council from 2003 to 2011. During this period, he held the position of deputy mayor, contributing to local governance in areas such as regional development and community services in the Illawarra-Shoalhaven region. His local government experience focused on advocating for infrastructure improvements and youth engagement initiatives, building a foundation for his subsequent state-level roles. Ward resigned from the council upon his successful election to the New South Wales Legislative Assembly as the member for Kiama in March 2011, securing 54.4% of the two-candidate-preferred vote against Labor.

Election to state parliament and Liberal Party roles

Ward joined the Shoalhaven branch of the Young Liberals in 1997 and advanced through various roles within the New South Wales division of the Liberal Party. He served as treasurer of the Shoalhaven Young Liberals from 1998 to 1999 and as a member of the policy committee of the NSW Young Liberals from 1999 to 2001. From 1999 onward, Ward acted as a delegate to the NSW Liberal Party State Council, contributed to the State Platform Committee from 2003 to 2005, and held the position of country representative on the State Executive from 2007 to 2012. On 12 April 2010, Ward, then deputy mayor of Shoalhaven City Council, was preselected as the Liberal Party candidate for the state , securing the nomination over competitors in a party ballot. At the 2011 state election on 26 March 2011, Ward was elected to the as the member for Kiama, defeating the incumbent Labor member and gaining the seat for the Liberals amid a statewide swing against Labor. Ward retained the Kiama seat for the Liberal Party in the 2015 and 2019 state elections, consolidating his position as a regional representative while continuing involvement in party structures, including as a former president of a Young Liberals club.

Ministerial appointments and legislative contributions

Ward served as Parliamentary Secretary for Education and the Illawarra and South Coast from 2015 to 2019, supporting policy implementation in regional education access and local infrastructure projects. Following the 2019 New South Wales state election, he was elevated to the executive as Minister for Families, Communities and Disability Services in the second Berejiklian ministry, sworn in on 2 April 2019 and holding the position until 14 May 2021. In this role, Ward oversaw a portfolio budget exceeding $10 billion annually, focusing on child protection, community housing, and disability support services, including expansions in foster care placements and regional service delivery. During his ministerial tenure, Ward contributed to legislative efforts advancing disability inclusion and community welfare, such as supporting amendments to the Disability Inclusion Act 2014 to enhance funding allocations for regional providers, which increased grants by 15% for non-metropolitan areas between 2019 and 2021. He also advocated for infrastructure tied to community needs, crediting his involvement in securing federal-state funding for the $290 million Berry Bypass project, completed in 2020, which improved safety on a high-risk section of the serving South Coast communities. These initiatives aligned with his emphasis on practical outcomes for rural electorates, including upgrades to local roads and schools that reduced accident rates on key routes by over 20% post-implementation. Beyond direct ministerial duties, Ward's legislative record includes introducing private members' bills addressing public safety and health infrastructure, such as the Road Transport Amendment (Driving Through Floodwaters) Bill 2024, which proposed stricter penalties for hazardous driving behaviors prevalent in flood-prone regional areas. Other efforts encompassed the Automated External Defibrillators (Public Access) Bill 2024, mandating AED installations in public venues to boost emergency response capabilities, and the David Berry Hospital Amendment (Prohibition of Sale) Bill 2024, aimed at preserving rural healthcare assets. These proposals reflected ongoing contributions to , drawing on data from regional incident reports to prioritize preventive measures over reactive spending.

Resignation from the Liberal Party and independent candidacy

Ward resigned from the Liberal Party on 2 2023, following the party's decision not to preselect him as its candidate for the Kiama electorate in the 25 March 2023 state election, a move attributed to the ongoing criminal charges against him for .) The preselection exclusion reflected internal party pressures amid the unresolved allegations, though Ward maintained his innocence and emphasized his legislative record in advocating for regional infrastructure, including road upgrades and local health services. By resigning his party membership, Ward positioned himself to contest the election as an independent, stating that this would enable a direct appeal to voters on his demonstrated delivery of outcomes for the electorate, such as securing for Shoalhaven-area projects, rather than being bound by dynamics. The Liberal Party fielded its own candidate, Andrew Gibbons, while Labor nominated Katelin McInerney; Ward's independent candidacy split the conservative vote but capitalized on incumbency and local in the safe Liberal seat. Ward secured re-election on 25 March 2023, topping the primary vote count and defeating McInerney on a two-party-preferred basis with a margin that held despite a swing to Labor amid statewide gains for the party. His victory, achieved while sitting on the crossbench since , underscored voter prioritization of constituency service over the pending legal matters, with Ward receiving preferences from minor parties and some Liberal voters unwilling to support the official party nominee. This outcome preserved his parliamentary tenure as an independent until subsequent developments in 2025.

Policy positions and achievements

Advocacy for regional development

As the Member for Kiama, representing a constituency in the Illawarra and South Coast region of New South Wales, Gareth Ward advocated for increased state investment in regional infrastructure and economic initiatives to counterbalance Sydney-centric policies. In his capacity as Parliamentary Secretary for the Illawarra and South Coast from 2017 to 2019, he promoted projects aimed at enhancing local tourism and community facilities. Ward chaired the Shoalhaven City Development Committee, focusing on precinct improvements such as the Bomaderry Shopping Centre and Railway area. Ward announced over $200,000 in funding for road maintenance and stimulus works across the Shoalhaven region in June 2020, supporting local recovery efforts post-economic downturn. As , he highlighted $100 million available for new regional projects to boost visitor attractions and in the area. He also contributed to the delivery of the $580 million Foxground and Bypass, which opened in and improved connectivity for regional transport. Ward repeatedly pressed for funding commitments on key infrastructure, including a June 2024 letter to the NSW urging allocation for the Bypass in the state budget. He demanded delivery of a promised $20 million for the Albion Park to address . In September 2023, Ward criticized impending budget cuts, warning they would delay vital regional projects and exacerbate disparities between metropolitan and rural areas.

Stances on social and economic issues

Ward supported the decriminalization of abortion in New South Wales through the Reproductive Health Care Reform Bill 2019, which removed abortion from the crimes act while imposing gestational limits of 22 weeks for unregulated procedures and requiring approval beyond that point for cases involving fetal abnormalities or maternal health risks. In parliamentary debate, he argued that abortion should not be treated as a criminal matter, emphasizing women's rights and aligning with the Liberal-National government's position despite internal party divisions. As Minister for Families, Communities and Disability Services from 2019 to 2021, Ward prioritized reforms in , including the establishment of an Aboriginal guardian role to address overrepresentation of Indigenous children in out-of-home care, framing it as an Aboriginal-led initiative to preserve cultural connections. He drew on his personal experience with and legal blindness to advocate for better educational supports for students with disabilities, pushing for inclusive policies in schools. Ward also criticized federal underfunding of the (NDIS), urging greater state-federal coordination to avoid shortchanging participants in favor of budget surpluses. On economic matters, Ward endorsed policies reducing the threshold for small businesses, highlighting a 2019 budget measure that increased the threshold from $750,000 to $1 million annually, which he described as a boost to regional employers and job creation. As a Liberal parliamentarian, he opposed Labor's fiscal approach, criticizing the 2025 state budget for projecting record debt levels exceeding $180 billion and lacking disciplined spending frameworks compared to prior budgets. His advocacy consistently emphasized regional , including funding like airport expansions, though he accused the Labor government of in allocation disputes.

Criticisms of Labor government policies

Ward has accused the Minns Labor government of implementing the highest taxing budget in history through the 2023-24 state budget, which introduced new taxes on property transactions valued over $3 million and expanded thresholds, measures he claimed disproportionately burdened families, small businesses, and regional economies already strained by . He argued these fiscal policies prioritized revenue generation over relief, exacerbating cost-of-living pressures without corresponding cuts to wasteful spending. In and policy, Ward, drawing on his prior role as Minister for and Social , has condemned Labor's initiatives as "fake fixes" that deceive the public, pointing to inadequate funding allocations and a failure to deliver on pre-election commitments to build social housing units, which he stated left thousands of vulnerable individuals without support amid rising rents and shortages. He further criticized Planning Minister Paul Scully's approach as favoring NIMBYism in Labor-held electorates, where housing projections were allegedly reduced while targets were inflated in non-Labor areas, undermining statewide supply goals. Ward has directed sharp rebukes at Labor's priorities, asserting a Sydney-centric bias that neglects regional needs, such as in the upgrade and potential scrapping of the Bypass project due to insufficient state commitment, which he warned could halt critical safety improvements and economic growth in the and South Coast. He moved parliamentary motions opposing cuts to projects like the Toolijooa Passenger Rail Passing Loop and raised alarms over the prolonged closure of the old Bridge without resolution, attributing these lapses to broken election promises on . Overall, Ward has portrayed Labor's governance as failing to deliver on for non-metropolitan areas, with risking vital road and rail enhancements essential for local employment and connectivity.

Controversies prior to criminal charges

Intra-party disputes

In September 2018, federal Liberal MP Ann Sudmalis publicly accused state MP Gareth Ward of ", betrayal and backstabbing" during an adjournment debate in federal parliament, citing these actions as factors in her decision not to recontest the seat of Gilmore at the next election. Sudmalis described a toxic internal party environment, particularly affecting female members, and implied Ward's involvement in aggressive tactics that undermined colleagues. Ward rejected the allegations, stating he was "not a bully" and urging Sudmalis to provide specific rather than general claims. He attributed her criticisms to broader frustrations within the party and denied any role in branch-stacking or targeted harassment, emphasizing his focus on regional representation. The exchange highlighted tensions over processes and gender dynamics in the NSW Liberal Party, with Sudmalis's comments sparking wider debate on the party's challenges in retaining women candidates. These accusations occurred amid Ward's rising influence in moderate Liberal factions, where his assertive style reportedly clashed with some colleagues seeking to challenge entrenched power structures. No formal party investigations resulted from the dispute, but it underscored factional rivalries that persisted until Ward's ministerial roles solidified his position under Premier . In August 2017, amid escalating tensions over delays in the Albion Park Rail Bypass project, Shellharbour City Council voted 8-1 to refer Gareth Ward to the Independent Commission Against Corruption (ICAC), accusing him of improper interference by urging NSW Roads Minister Duncan Gay to override council decisions on property acquisitions for the route. Marianne Saliba, a Labor figure, specifically criticized Ward's involvement, claiming it bypassed proper processes and favored state government priorities over local input. Ward countered by accusing the council of stalling the $585 million infrastructure project through resistance to compulsory acquisitions, which he argued served regional economic needs. On August 15, 2017, Ward preemptively referred himself to the ICAC, stating he had acted transparently in his role as Parliamentary Secretary for the Illawarra and South Coast, with no undisclosed interests or conflicts. The commission did not initiate public inquiries or adverse findings against him in relation to this referral, and no corruption allegations proceeded to formal investigation or charges. Ward later referenced the self-referral in parliamentary debates as proof of his adherence to ethical standards, dismissing opponents' claims as politically motivated attempts to undermine infrastructure advocacy. The incident amplified partisan divides in the region, with Labor critics portraying Ward's intervention as an abuse of parliamentary influence to pressure a Labor-leaning , potentially eroding public trust in cross-level collaboration on development projects. Supporters within the Liberal Party viewed it as assertive representation against bureaucratic inertia, but it fueled broader narratives of Ward's combative style, including subsequent complaints he lodged against local opponents—such as former Kiama Greg Watson, who labeled them "spurious" and retaliatory. No evidence emerged of systemic corruption in the bypass dealings, though the referrals underscored how ICAC processes can become tools in regional political skirmishes without yielding substantive accountability outcomes.

Initial complaints and suspension

In late 2021, shortly after Gareth Ward's appointment as Minister for Families and Communities on October 21, an alleged victim reported to New South Wales Police that Ward had sexually assaulted him in 2013, when the complainant was in his early 20s and working as a political staffer. The report was prompted by the ministerial role, which the complainant viewed as incompatible with the alleged history. A second complainant, alleging indecent assaults by Ward in 2015 when the victim was 26, came forward during the ensuing police investigation, providing statements that corroborated patterns of behavior described by the first. These complaints triggered a Strike Force Sabu investigation by the NSW Police Child Abuse and Sex Crimes Squad, leading to Ward's and charges on March 22, 2022. The charges comprised one count of (maximum penalty 14 years imprisonment), three counts of (maximum 5 years each), and one count of , all historical offenses against males rather than minors. Ward, who had denied the allegations since their emergence, was granted conditional bail and pleaded not guilty, asserting the encounters were consensual. The Liberal Party responded swiftly, suspending Ward's membership on March 23, 2022, citing the gravity of the charges as incompatible with party standards. The following day, March 24, the NSW Legislative Assembly unanimously passed a motion—moved by Premier Dominic Perrottet—to suspend Ward from parliamentary duties, privileges, and proceedings until the conclusion of legal proceedings, marking a rare invocation of standing orders for an unconvicted member. This suspension barred him from the chamber, committee participation, and electorate office funding, though he retained his salary as an elected member. Ward criticized the moves as premature, arguing they presumed guilt and denied due process.

Trial evidence and defense arguments

The prosecution's case relied primarily on the testimonies of two complainants, who alleged separate incidents of sexual assault by Ward in 2013 and 2015. The first complainant, aged 18 at the time, described an incident at Ward's Meroo Meadow home where, after becoming intoxicated and pretending to sleep on the lawn, Ward allegedly placed a hand down his pants and touched his genitals before moving him to a bedroom for a straddling massage. The second complainant, aged 24, recounted an assault at Ward's Potts Point apartment following drinks at Parliament House; he alleged Ward joined him uninvited, ignored verbal refusals, slid a hand into his boxer shorts, digitally penetrated him, kissed his neck, and masturbated while he lay frozen in shock and pain. Prosecutors emphasized similarities between the accounts—despite the men being strangers from different cities—including power imbalances with Ward as a senior politician, intoxication upon arrival followed by additional alcohol, isolation at Ward's residences, and assaults initiated while the complainants were lying down—to argue a pattern of predatory behavior rather than coincidence. Supporting witnesses, such as a friend of one complainant, journalist Gavin Coote, and YouTuber Kristo Langker, corroborated elements of the timelines and emotional states described. No forensic evidence, such as DNA or physical traces, was presented, with the case hinging on testimonial credibility. Ward's defense, led by barrister David Campbell SC, contested the allegations as untrue and unsupported, highlighting inconsistencies in the complainants' recollections and their post-incident behaviors. For the older complainant, the defense noted shifting details on dates and apartment layouts, alongside friendly ongoing contact including a job application praising Ward, which undermined claims of trauma. Regarding the younger complainant, arguments pointed to unreliable memory influenced by elapsed time, alcohol, and substance use, framing a back massage as non-sexual comfort rather than assault. Ward denied the incidents occurred as described or constituted abuse, attributing distortions to faded memories and external influences. The defense further impugned the police investigation as flawed, selective, and potentially dishonest, accusing lead investigator former Detective Senior Constable Cameron Bignell of procedural lapses. revealed Bignell's breach of a by arriving hours late to testify, delays in key actions like a 2021 walk-through of the alleged 2015 scene conducted years later, and failures to pursue critical inquiries such as interviewing a relevant flatmate, Ward's regular driver, or obtaining 2013 taxi records before data expiration. Campbell argued these omissions reflected a biased mindset prioritizing prosecution over thoroughness, rendering the probe unreliable. Ward pleaded not guilty to all five charges, maintaining his innocence throughout the nine-week trial.

Conviction and sentencing developments

On 25 July 2025, a jury in the District Court convicted Gareth Ward of one count of sexual intercourse without consent and three counts of , offenses allegedly committed against two young male complainants in the area during the early 2010s when Ward was in his 20s. The charges stemmed from complaints made by a former parliamentary staffer and another individual, with the jury returning unanimous guilty verdicts after a two-week trial. Ward maintained his innocence throughout the proceedings and publicly stated his intent to appeal the convictions, describing the outcome as a . On 30 July 2025, Judge Sarah Huggett revoked Ward's , citing the seriousness of the offenses and risk factors, leading to his immediate remand in custody at Correctional Centre pending sentencing. Sentencing hearings began on 19 September 2025 in the NSW District Court, where one victim delivered an impact statement detailing long-term , including anxiety, depression, and disrupted relationships resulting from the assaults. Ward's defense counsel argued for a lenient sentence, emphasizing his client's remorse, rehabilitation prospects, and "enormous fall from grace"—including the loss of his political career, prospective legal qualifications, and community standing—as specific deterrence factors, asserting that "the courts will not see him again." Proceedings continued into early October 2025, with prosecutors highlighting an regarding Ward's lack of demonstrated accountability, while the defense reiterated his potential to contribute positively to society post-sentence through advocacy or other means. As of 9 October 2025, sentencing remained pending, with Judge Huggett yet to impose a term of .

Resignation from parliament and aftermath

Refusal to resign and expulsion proceedings

Following his on July 25, 2025, for sexually assaulting two young men, Gareth Ward faced immediate demands from both the government and opposition to resign from as the independent member for Kiama. Ward refused, prompting the NSW to initiate expulsion proceedings under section 13 of the Constitution Act 1902, which permits expulsion by a two-thirds vote for "disorderly or indecent conduct" or other serious misconduct. This would have marked the first such expulsion in over a century, as no NSW MP had been removed by parliamentary vote since 1917. Ward mounted a legal challenge to block the expulsion, securing an initial from the on August 4, 2025, to halt proceedings pending further review. His lawyers argued that the convictions alone did not constitute sufficient grounds for automatic disqualification or expulsion, asserting that parliamentary powers must be exercised proportionately and that Ward retained the right to represent his electorate until sentencing or appeal outcomes. The NSW Court of Appeal dismissed the challenge on August 7, 2025, in Ward v Hoenig NSWCA 180, ruling that parliament held inherent authority to expel members for grave criminal convictions to uphold public trust, without requiring proof of ongoing disorderly behavior. Less than two hours before the scheduled expulsion vote on , 2025, Ward tendered his resignation, averting the parliamentary ballot and triggering a by-election in the Kiama electorate. This followed the revocation of his bail on August 1, 2025, after the court deemed him a flight risk due to prior international travel attempts, though he remained free pending sentencing. Ward's refusal to resign earlier had prolonged the process amid widespread criticism, with parliamentary leaders from both major parties emphasizing the need to bar convicted serious offenders from holding office.

Impact on Kiama electorate and Liberal Party

Ward resigned from the New South Wales Parliament on August 7, 2025, hours before a scheduled vote to expel him following his July 25 conviction for one count of sexual intercourse without consent and three counts of , thereby vacating the seat of Kiama and triggering a . The resignation ended Ward's representation of the electorate, which he had held continuously since 2011—initially as a Liberal until 2021, then as an independent after departing the party amid earlier allegations. The Kiama , held on September 13, 2025, resulted in a victory for Labor candidate Katelin McInerney, who secured 37.3% of the primary vote (a 2.9% increase from the 2023 state election) and 60.6% of the against the Liberal candidate, Serena Copley. This marked the first time Labor had won the seat since its creation in 1988, flipping it from Ward's independent hold in 2023 and representing a significant shift in the regional electorate south of . Analysts viewed the outcome as a test of voter sentiment toward the Minns Labor government and the opposition Liberals, with Labor's gain attributed in part to dissatisfaction with Ward's prolonged tenure amid scandals, though primary vote swings showed limited overall movement (Liberals at 26.5%, Nationals 20.1%, and independents splitting the remainder). For the Liberal Party, the by-election loss compounded challenges in reclaiming influence in the Illawarra and South Coast regions, where Ward had been a dominant figure during his party affiliation from 2011 to 2021, including roles as a senior shadow minister and party powerbroker. Although Ward had run as an independent since 2021 and won re-election in 2023 without Liberal endorsement, his historical ties and the optics of his conviction drew renewed scrutiny to the party's past tolerance of internal controversies, prompting calls within Liberal ranks for stronger candidate vetting. The defeat, despite a reported 10% two-party swing toward Liberals compared to Ward's 2023 independent result on a notional Labor-Liberal matchup, highlighted difficulties in distancing from Ward's legacy while competing against Labor's incumbency advantages under Premier Chris Minns.

Broader political implications

The case of Gareth Ward highlighted longstanding deficiencies in parliamentary mechanisms for addressing serious criminal among members, as his refusal to resign after a July 2025 for one count of and three counts of prompted the rare invocation of the Legislative Assembly's expulsion power. Courts upheld the parliament's inherent authority to expel members for gross , rejecting Ward's arguments that such action constituted unconstitutional or interference with voter mandate, thereby affirming the supremacy of legislative privilege over individual tenure in cases of proven criminality. This episode fueled debates on reforming MP accountability, with critics pointing to the absence of automatic disqualification for indictable offenses as a allowing convicted individuals to retain seats, salaries, and influence—Ward continued receiving taxpayer-funded pay while incarcerated pending sentencing in September 2025. A post-resignation by Kiama constituents sought legislative changes to bar MPs convicted of serious crimes from holding office without judicial or electoral intervention, underscoring public frustration with protracted legal maneuvers that delay resolution. Observers described the saga as emblematic of a broader "bad men problem" in Australian parliaments, where inadequate enforcement of behavioral standards enables members accused or convicted of to evade swift removal, eroding institutional integrity. Electorally, Ward's August 7, 2025 resignation—mere hours before the expulsion vote—triggered a September 13 in Kiama, where Labor's Katelin McInerney secured victory with 60.6% of the against the Liberal candidate, representing a 10.7% swing to Labor in a seat Ward had held independently since 2021 despite prior allegations. This outcome signaled potential vulnerabilities for the NSW Liberal Party, which failed to reclaim the electorate amid associations with Ward's earlier tenure, testing opposition cohesion under leader and foreshadowing challenges in regional voter sentiment ahead of the 2027 state election. While Ward's independent status distanced the Liberals from direct blame, the case amplified scrutiny of their historical handling of internal disputes and allegations against him, contributing to perceptions of weakened .

References

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