Matthew Jason Guy (born 6 March 1974) is an Australian politician. He has been a Liberal Party member of the Parliament of Victoria since 2006, representing the Northern Metropolitan Region in the Legislative Council (2006–2014) and Bulleen in the Legislative Assembly (2014–present). He was Leader of the Opposition in Victoria and state leader of the Liberal Party from 2014 to 2018 and again from 2021 to 2022, having resigned following his respective losses in the 2018 and 2022 Victorian state elections.
Guy has a Bachelor of Arts in politics and history from La Trobe University and completed postgraduate studies in Ukrainian language and culture at Monash University. According to a 2013 Herald-Sun profile, he "speaks Ukrainian, has visited relatives in the country many times and is a proud and active member of Melbourne's Ukrainian community".
After leaving university, Guy worked as director of research in the office of Victorian premier Jeff Kennett from 1997 to 1999. He also worked briefly as media adviser to Senator Rod Kemp, before returning to state politics as chief of staff to opposition leader Denis Napthine from 1999 to 2002. In 2003, Guy joined the Victorian Farmers Federation as marketing and communications manager. He moved to the Australian Securities and Investments Commission (ASIC) in 2004 as government relations manager.
Days later, Guy reversed his decision, advising the Bass Coast mayor, Veronica Dowman, that he had changed his mind. "Planning minister reverses Ventnor zoning decision" , ABC, 22 September 2011. Retrieved 4 February 2014 It is believed that Guy succumbed to backroom pressure from Liberal heavy-weights (including local federal Liberal MP Greg Hunt, Victorian Premier Ted Baillieu and his deputy, Louise Asher) when he back-flipped on his original decision to rezone the land."Minister sued for planning backflip", in The Age, 20 January 2012 The developer behind the rezoning, Ms Carley Nicholls, claims to have received a favourable hearing from Matthew Guy when she briefed him on the scheme at a "kitchen table meeting" in her home months before he controversially approved it. "The minister, the landowner and the rezoning backflip that is heading to court" , in The Age, 26 June 2013 Nicholls purchased the property based on the rezoning decision and subsequently sought to sue Guy and have his original rezoning decision reinstated. In defence, Guy stated in court documents that he acted in error in rezoning the land but had relied on the advice of ministerial staff. He says he overturned his decision after learning that the Bass Coast Shire Council opposed the extension of town boundaries at Ventnor. Guy denied discussing the Ventnor project with Ms Nicholls or even knowing of her interest in the property.
Legal proceedings terminated in August 2013 with a multimillion-dollar out-of-court settlement, with taxpayers footing the bill. "Watchdog to probe Guy's botched land rezoning" , in The Age, 16 October 2013 "Taxpayers foot multimillion dollar legal bill after settlement in case against Liberal Planning Minister Matthew Guy", in The Herald Sun, 20 August 2013 In October 2013, the Victorian ombudsman George Brouwer decided to launch an investigation to address Guy's decision to rezone the Ventnor site, against the original advice of his department, the department's lawyers, the local Bass Coast shire and an independent planning panel. The settlement cost Victorian taxpayers $2.5 million plus costs, for a total of more than $3.5 million, documents reveal. Senior lawyers had told the government that it should have paid a maximum of $250,000 plus legal costs. Confidential Government documents show Guy ordered the multimillion-dollar payment despite repeated legal advice from a number of senior lawyers that the government had a strong case, and there was little or no grounds for a damages claim against it. "This may be winnable @ law but this is a political fight and it is unwinnable," Guy is quoted as saying in confidential notes made by the Victorian Government Solicitor's Office in July 2013.
In early 2014, Guy overruled his department to block the release of freedom of information documents about the botched rezoning of farmland on Phillip Island. "Planning Minister Matthew Guys blocks the release of Ventnor rezoning documents" , in The Age, 20 January 2014 In March 2014, Mr Brouwer found that Guy was ultimately responsible for the rezoning decision and that he had refused to hand over important documents requested as part of his investigation. "Ombudsman slams government over its botched Phillip Island Ventnor rezoning" , in The Age, 27 March 2014. Retrieved 30 March 2014 However, Mr Brouwer also found that Guy was unaware that his advisers were acting in his name when asking for the planning department to change its advice.
By March 2013, Guy had issued approvals for numerous tower projects in central Melbourne, while rejecting only one. "Planning expert blasts legacy of Mr Skyscraper" in The Age, 19 March 2013 The one project Guy did not approve and instead intervened to stop was an 88-metre apartment tower at 35 Albert Road, where he imposed height controls. Doing so protected the views to the bay enjoyed by some of Melbourne's richest business people, including active Liberal Party supporters, MP Andrea Coote and former federal deputy Liberal leader Peter Reith, from a nearby tower.
In March 2013, Guy announced that he had approved plans for the tallest tower in the southern hemisphere – Australia 108 – with a height of 388 metres, 90 metres higher than Eureka Tower. This approval drew criticism from the Melbourne Lord Mayor Robert Doyle, who was concerned the building would cast a shadow over the Shrine of Remembrance, and from planning academic Professor Michael Buxton, who referred to Guy as "Mr Skyscraper."
In February 2014 Guy approved five large apartment developments on what he dubbed as "Super Tuesday". They included a 'pencil thin' 55 storey tower at 464 Collins Street, a 63-storey, 632-unit tower on A'Beckett Street near Elizabeth Street, and a 55-storey tower of 466 apartments at 398 Elizabeth Street.
In June 2014, Australia 108 was approved for a second time with a height reduction after Fairfax Media revealed the building violated federal air safety regulations for Essendon Airport.
At the same time Guy approved a 75-level tower at 452 Elizabeth Street, and a 54-storey building at 84–90 Queensbridge Street, with reasons he gave being that with Australia 108 they would provide homes for 4000 people, and "Building more apartments in the city takes population pressure off quieter suburban areas,". Opposition planning spokesman Brian Tee said the minister, by approving so many skyscrapers so quickly for Melbourne's CBD, was displaying "a complete disregard for the impact these developments are going to have" over a 15- or 20-year period.
The Coalition government was criticised for offering little in the way of explanation for no-go zones. The new planning laws were criticised by academics on the basis that they would: entrench fossil fuel generation in the state, make it harder for Victoria to move towards renewable energy, put local above global concerns, and treat wind as more dangerous than coal. "Regulating wind farms out of Victoria" , The Conversation, 7 September 2011 Industry also expressed concern about impact of the wind laws on jobs and investment, as did the State opposition. Brian Tee Media Release , 19 September 2011 Wind turbine tower manufacturer Keppel Prince threatened to move parts of the business interstate "Portland's Keppel Prince fears wind farm changes" , in The Standard, 31 August 2011 30 March 2014 but did not. Keppel Prince - Wind Farm Projects , Retrieved 13 September 2021 The Clean Energy Council said the change would cost hundreds of new jobs in regional areas and drive $3.6 billion of investment away from Victoria. "Baillieu's Wind Farm Crackdown" , in The Age, 30 August 2011Pacific Hydro stated that they are not looking at new greenfield developments in Victoria and Windlab Systems stated that the Government's planning laws had "gone too far" and the company was moving all staff to Canberra
The then Premier Ted Baillieu had opposed wind energy since the early 2000s, raising concerns about the approval of projects at Portland in western Victoria and the Bald Hills proposal in Gippsland. He referred to wind turbines as "towering triffids" and referred to then Steve Bracks as a "coastal vandal" and as someone who avoided visiting the Toora wind farm out of fear of being "lynched". Parliament of Victoria Hansard, 26 August 2004 Parliament of Victoria Hansard, 27 August 2003
On 6 March 2013 Denis Napthine became Premier of Victoria. His electorate is home to the largest wind farm in the southern hemisphere and also hosts wind turbine tower manufacturer Keppel Prince. Napthine indicated there would be no change to Guy's wind energy planning laws, "Napthine happy with wind farm regulations" , in Climate Spectator, 15 April 2013 despite the economic benefits to the Premier's electorate and his personal admiration of wind turbines. "I love them but we can't have them everywhere. Premier on Wind Farms" , in The Sydney Morning Herald 12 April 2013 Bloomberg New Energy Finance has stated that the wind laws "could push up the price of electricity for consumers by around $2 billion. This is because the Victorian laws essentially will make it harder and more expensive to build renewable energy."
In July 2014, Guy announced a small adjustment to the planning laws allowing existing wind farm permits to be amended, which may assist with upgrading turbine technology.
Guy was elected as leader of the Liberal Party in a leadership ballot contested on 4 December 2014, making him Leader of the Opposition after defeating Michael O'Brien for the position.
In February 2022, Guy, along with Peter Walsh, David Davis, Gary Blackwood and Melina Bath, were fined $100 each for breaching face mask rules, after the Coalition MPs were photographed maskless while attending an event in Parliament House.
Guy counter-attacked Daniel Andrews over email contact between Andrews and property developer John Woodman. Woodman was the subject of IBAC investigation, starting in 2019, into alleged payments made to City of Casey councillors. Guy said the emails were an "integrity" issue and that Andrews had to "come out and explain" them. Andrews "did not believe that any correspondence existed" between him and Woodman, but began a search of his records. On 19 August 2022 Andrews revealed a small number of emails regarding a pair of charity golf events organised by Woodman in 2017 and 2018. The events raised $400,000 for the Monash Children's Hospital and $300,000 for the Royal Women's Hospital of Melbourne.
On 16 November 2022 the Victorian Electoral Commission confirmed that they referred Guy, Catlin and Munz to IBAC after the Electoral Commission did not receive full cooperation during their investigation into the potential breaches of funding & disclosure laws.
On 8 November Guy defended his party advertising attacking Dan Andrews for being a "prick", and the use of footage from antivax protests in Melbourne where protestors urinated on the Shrine of Remembrance and attacked police.-
On 10 November 2022, Guy downplayed his deputy David Southwick using two staffers employed by Southwick as actors in campaign ads without disclosing they are members of his campaign staff. When Guy was asked if the use of paid staffers in campaign ads was misleading, Guy replied by endorsing Southwick and stating that "it was not misleading" regardless of the lack of a disclaimer.
On 19 November 2022, Guy dumped Renee Heath, the first ranked candidate for the Liberal ticket in the Eastern Victoria Region of the upper house Victorian Legislative Council, from the party after her far-right conservative religious views, including support for Conversion therapy, were bought to light by a newspaper investigation. The decision came too late for Heath to be disendorsed by the party, and her position on the ticket made it an effective certainty that she would win a position in Parliament. Questions were raised over how much Guy and the Liberal Party knew of her views, and the accusations of Entryism made regarding Heath and her family by Liberal party member Cathrine Burnett-Wake in her final address to Parliament after Heath defeated her for pre-selection.
Guy's Liberal/National coalition lost the election to
Guy has served as Victorian Shadow Minister for Public Transport since October 2023, and was appointed Shadow Minister for Transition to Government in January 2025.
Guy is a Christian, and in his maiden speech to parliament stated that he attended Scots' Church, Melbourne.
, Guy was a member of the St Kilda Saints, the South Sydney Rabbitohs, Radio 3RRR and the National Trust of Victoria.
Political career
Minister for Planning (2010–2014)
Ventnor land rezoning
High-rise building approvals
Wind farm laws
Opposition leader (2014–2018)
Comparing jails to South Africa
"Lobster with a Mobster"
Good Friday pairing incident
State election loss
Opposition leader (2021–2022)
/ref>
On 13 September 2022, during a Victorian parliamentary session for offering of condolences following the death of Queen Elizabeth II, Guy mistakenly referred to King Arthur as one of the historical monarchs of the United Kingdom, rather than King Alfred. Guy's office suggested that he “misspoke/misread” and Hansard was amended to read "King Alfred", per the editorial policy.
August 2022 corruption allegations and IBAC referral
2022 Victorian state election loss
/ref>
Resignation as Opposition Leader
Personal life
See also
External links
|
|