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THU · 2026-04-16 · 01:29 GMTBRIEF NSR-2026-0416-69858
News/Former NSW MP spruiked as ‘esteemed’ Liberal at campaign eve…
NSR-2026-0416-69858News Report·EN·Political Strategy

Former NSW MP spruiked as ‘esteemed’ Liberal at campaign event – despite Icac’s ‘serious corrupt conduct’ finding

Former NSW MP John Sidoti, who was found by ICAC to have engaged in serious corrupt conduct, was celebrated at a re-election fundraiser for his successor, Stephanie Di Pasqua. The event, headlined by NSW opposition leader Kellie Sloane, took place last week.

Penry BuckleyThe Guardian - World NewsFiled 2026-04-16 · 01:29 GMTLean · Center-LeftRead · 4 min
Former NSW MP spruiked as ‘esteemed’ Liberal at campaign event – despite Icac’s ‘serious corrupt conduct’ finding
The Guardian - World NewsFIG 01
Reading time
4min
Word count
934words
Sources cited
2cited
Entities identified
10entities
Quality score
75%
§ 01

Briefing Summary

AI-generated
NEWSAR · AI

Former NSW MP John Sidoti, who was found by ICAC to have engaged in serious corrupt conduct, was celebrated at a re-election fundraiser for his successor, Stephanie Di Pasqua. The event, headlined by NSW opposition leader Kellie Sloane, took place last week. A staff member from Sloane's office emceed the event and acknowledged Sidoti as one of the "esteemed luminaries of the Liberal party," drawing applause. In 2022, ICAC found Sidoti engaged in "serious corrupt conduct" to benefit his family's property interests. The NSW opposition has faced criticism for its perceived lack of support for ICAC, which has investigated several Liberal leaders.

Confidence 0.90Sources 2Claims 5Entities 10
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Article analysis

Model · rule-based
Framing
Political Strategy
Legal & Judicial
Tone
Mixed Tone
AI-assessed
CalmNeutralAlarmist
Factuality
0.80 / 1.00
Factual
LowHigh
Sources cited
2
Limited
FewMany
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Key claims

5 extracted
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Ms Sloane was not advised of Mr Sidoti’s attendance prior to her arrival at the event.

factuala spokesperson for Sloane
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1.00
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Sloane told parliament she wanted the watchdog to “use its fullest investigative powers when conducting its current inquiries”.

quoteKellie Sloane
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1.00
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A staff member in Kellie Sloane’s parliamentary office emceed the event.

factualGuardian Australia
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1.00
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John Sidoti attended a re-election campaign launch event for his successor, Stephanie Di Pasqua.

factualGuardian Australia
Confidence
1.00
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John Sidoti was found by ICAC to have engaged in serious corrupt conduct to benefit his family’s property interests.

factualGuardian Australia
Confidence
1.00
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Full report

4 min read · 934 words
Former NSW Liberal minister John Sidoti leaves a 2021 Icac inquiry into his family property developments in Sydney. Photograph: Mick Tsikas/AAP View image in fullscreen Former NSW Liberal minister John Sidoti leaves a 2021 Icac inquiry into his family property developments in Sydney. Photograph: Mick Tsikas/AAP Former NSW MP spruiked as ‘esteemed’ Liberal at campaign event – despite Icac’s ‘serious corrupt conduct’ finding Exclusive: John Sidoti wins cheers and applause at re-election fundraiser for his successor Follow our Australia news live blog for latest updates Get our breaking news email, free app or daily news podcast A former New South Wales minister found by Icac to have engaged in serious corrupt conduct has been feted as one of the “esteemed luminaries of the Liberal Party” at an election fundraiser headlined by the state opposition leader, Kellie Sloane. John Sidoti, a former Liberal minister and state member for Drummoyne who left the party in 2021 amid an investigation by the Independent Commission Against Corruption, attended a re-election campaign launch event last week for his successor as MP and former staffer, Stephanie Di Pasqua. Last week’s event was emceed by a staff member in Sloane’s parliamentary office. In footage seen by Guardian Australia from the opening speeches, the staff member acknowledged Sidoti’s presence after welcoming state and federal parliamentarians, including Sloane. “We’ve also got several esteemed luminaries of the Liberal Party, most importantly, our former member for Drummoyne, John Sidoti – thank you for coming this evening John,” they said, drawing applause and cheers. In 2022, Icac found that Sidoti had engaged in “serious corrupt conduct” to benefit his family’s property interests. Under Sloane’s leadership, the NSW opposition has come under fire for a perceived lack of support for the corruption watchdog, which has investigated several Liberal leaders and members, including the former premier Gladys Berejiklian, prompting her 2021 resignation. The former Liberal premier, Barry O’Farrell, who himself resigned in 2014 after admitting to misleading Icac, criticised the Coalition after it opposed a bill to give Icac permanent powers to use unlawful recordings of conversations in its investigations. Sloane told parliament last month that she wanted the watchdog to “use its fullest investigative powers when conducting its current inquiries” but proposed a warrant system, which was not supported by the Minns government. The Coalition ultimately backed down and supported the bill’s passage. A spokesperson for Sloane said she had “attended the fundraising event organised by the NSW Liberal Party with roughly 130 attenders and several VIP guests”. “Ms Sloane was not advised of Mr Sidoti’s attendance prior to her arrival at the event.” Guardian Australia understands that Sloane’s staff member hosted the event in a voluntary capacity, as a member of the local party executive. The NSW deputy leader, Natalie Ward, and the shadow ministers Tim James and Chris Rath attended the Drummoyne event, as well as the federal senator and deputy opposition whip, Jessica Collins. Sidoti told Guardian Australia he had “popped in” as the former local member without buying a ticket, and because he knew the owners of the venue, Aqua Luna. He said he had planned to be there for 10 or 15 minutes but was asked to stay for the speeches. “And I got mentioned in the speeches,” he said. He said he had been at the event for about an hour and was “pleasantly surprised” by the response he had from other attenders. Sidoti said he had spoken to Sloane briefly: “I wished her best of luck at her next election.” The former Liberal member served as sports minister in 2019 before standing aside pending an Icac investigation into allegations he used his parliamentary role to influence Liberal City of Canada Bay councillors in relation to several properties in Five Dock between late 2013 and early 2017. The watchdog recommended that the director of public prosecutions consider charging Sidoti with misconduct in public office. Sidoti, who stepped down from the Liberal Party to join the crossbench when public hearings were announced, has maintained his innocence. The DPP has yet to bring a prosecution against him. “I’m waiting for my day in court,” he told Guardian Australia, saying Icac was a “non-judicial body”. Icac corruption findings, which are not legally binding, can be appealed on limited procedural grounds through a process known as judicial review. Berejiklian lost an appeal against her corruption finding in 2024. “I’m sad to call myself Australian … that you’re not afforded the presumption of innocence and the rule of law,” he said. “The system’s broken.” Despite calls by the then-premier, Dominic Perrottet, for him to resign, Sidoti remained as MP for Drummoyne until 2023, when he did not seek re-election. Di Pasqua, a Canada Bay deputy mayor and Sidoti’s former electorate officer, won the seat. She declined to comment. Sidoti said he had rejoined the Liberal Party “about two years ago” after leaving parliament but had not made any donations beyond the cost of his membership. The Drummoyne event came amid reported Liberal fundraising difficulties less than a year from the March 2027 election. Tickets for the three-course dinner ranged from $220 for individual registration to $2,000 for a table of 10. VIP tickets, for seats at a table with Sloane and shadow ministers, were $500. A spokesperson for the NSW Liberals said Sidoti had not been on the list of registered attenders for last week’s event. Sloane and the NSW Liberals did not respond to questions about the appropriateness of Sidoti’s attendance. Explore more on these topics Liberal Party New South Wales politics Independent Commission Against Corruption New South Wales Sydney news Share Reuse this content
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Entities

10 identified