Appreciate our quality journalism? Please subscribe here
DONATE
EXCLUSIVE
The central and by far most powerful and influential “No” campaign lobby is a sham.
Two-thirds of the directors of the fake “grassroots” campaign network have filed fake residential addresses with regulators; none of its at least six arms has a telephone number — and the entire operation is “based” at a fake national headquarters.
Minutes from Parliament House, in Canberra’s CBD, is the “address” of the Advance (now officially calling itself “Advance Aus Ltd”) campaign, a murky network of at least six interconnected entities lobbying against an Indigenous Voice to parliament.
That address has been posted across the nation.
On campaign flyers, in the fine print on its string of pop-up internet sites, in the advertisements pumped out via its shadowy web of affiliates that are flooding social media.
In a full-page, racist advertisement in The Australian Financial Review.
One block back from Canberra’s main thoroughfare, the office tower at 15 Moore Street, known as ANZ House, is the supposed national headquarters of the No campaign.
It’s the address the campaign – which is aggressively fighting against an Indigenous Voice to parliament – has filed with the Australian Electoral Commission (AEC), as well with charities regulator the Australian Charities and Not-for-Profits Commission (ACNC).
“Level 4, 15 Moore Street Canberra, ACT 2601”, is its “principal place of business”, it has told the corporate regulator, the Australian Securities and Investments Commission (ASIC).
Only, like much else with the opaque campaign, it’s a blatant lie.
Please support us and SUBSCRIBE HERE
Neither Advance, or any one of its network of affiliates, operates from the building.
And they never have.
The Klaxon has spent the past fortnight attempting to track down, or get comment from, those behind the anti-Indigenous Voice campaign.
At least six arms of the network have been identified to date.
They include Advance Aus Ltd and its campaign brand Fair Australia (which both claim the Voice goes too far); “Not Enough” (a site suggesting the Voice doesn’t go far enough”); Australians for Unity (the “charity” arm of the network) and “Referendum for News” (which falsely holds itself out as an impartial news source).
Please SUBSCRIBE HERE and support our quality journalism.
On Wednesday, Guardian Australia revealed another site had popped up, “Christians for Equality”, which has been “endorsed” by far right “Christian” campaigner Lyle Shelton. (Its “authorised by” statement also gives the “Level 4. Moore Street” Canberra address).
Not one has a telephone number.
The only “contact” details each provides is an email address, each containing the name of the corresponding site.
We received no response to our requests for comment.
Google searches for Level 4, 15 Moore Street, came up with a string of obscure entities, including a financial planner, a “migration agent” and a security company.
Calling a number listed online for one of those entities (the entity was similarly not located in the building) we were provided with the telephone number of a company called Regus.
On its website, Regus advertises “shared office space” on levels four and five of the building, that can be rented “for a day, for a month, or longer”.
(An earlier attempt by The Klaxon to contact Regus was unsuccessful – the phone number on its website was invalid).
Regus told us Advance was not located in the building — it was a “virtual office”.
Its website shows, along with “office space”, “co-working” and “meeting rooms”, Regus offers “virtual offices”.
It offers a “Virtual Office” package — “a prestigious business address, with telephone answering, a virtual receptionist” — from $165 a month.
It also offers a “Virtual Office Plus” package – from $329 a month – with “everything in our Virtual Office package” plus “access to meeting rooms and five days of office space each month”.
There is also a “Business Address” option. That offers a “virtual presence anywhere”, for $85 a month.
“Build a business and enhance your credibility using a virtual address at any of our 4000+ locations,” it states.
“Build a business and enhance your credibility using a virtual address at any of our 4000+ locations” – Regus
A Regus employee told us Advance had a Business Address package.
Investigations reveal that of all the network of entities in the central No campaign group, it has just three directors.
They are Matthew Sheahan, a Laura Jean Bradley; and Vicki Dunn — a long-time Liberal MP in the ACT Government.
In signed documents filed with the ASIC — for both Advance Au Ltd and Australians for Unity — Bradley and Sheahan have stated fake residential addresses, investigations show.
Each has stated their home addresses as “Suite 5, 245 Fullerton Road, Eastwood SA” — which is the Adelaide office of a law firm called Oakbridge Lawyers.
Despite having “authorised” the vast majority of the political statements of the Advance campaign, very little is known about Sheahan, who appears to have no online presence before he appeared in connection with Advance (then Advance Australia) about two years ago.
Please DONATE here and support quality, independent journalism.
While his “principal place of business” is a fake office in Canberra, and his residential address is a fake home in Adelaide, his Facebook profile says he is from Brisbane.
Even less is known about Bradley.
Dunne, the only one among the three who appears to have a LinkedIn profile, did not respond when approached for comment.
Help us get the truth out from as little as $10/month.
Unleash the excitement of playing your favorite casino games from the comfort of your own home or on the go. With real money online casinos in South Africa, the possibilities are endless. Whether you’re into classic slots, progressive jackpots, or live dealer games, you’ll find it all at your fingertips. Join the millions of players enjoying the thrill of real money gambling and see if today is your lucky day!
The need for fearless, independent media has never been greater. Journalism is on its knees – and the media landscape is riddled with vested interests. Please consider subscribing for as little as $10 a month to help us keep holding the powerful to account.