The preselection running mate of Liberal powerbroker Bev McArthur has abruptly withdrawn from the race for a spot on the party’s upper house ticket amid reported online links to content shared by neo-Nazi extremists.
Western District beef farmer and mother of three Susanne Marro withdrew as a candidate from Saturday’s preselection contest after the party’s applicant review committee was reportedly alerted to allegedly troubling activity on her social media.
Five Liberal Party sources, speaking confidentially to discuss internal party processes, claimed the committee raised concerns about Marro allegedly engaging online with content linked to neo-Nazi associates.
There is no suggestion that Marro or McArthur sympathise with neo-Nazis or share their views. The Age has not seen the content in question.
Marro did not respond to questions when contacted by this masthead on Thursday. McArthur also declined to comment.
Marro’s withdrawal is a blow for McArthur, her factional ally and the Liberal Party’s leader in the upper house, who is seeking preselection to remain the party’s No.1 candidate for the western region. McArthur was a strong supporter of Marro and had appeared this year at several campaign events alongside her.
Marro in her promotional material is also pictured with former prime minister Tony Abbott, former Victorian premier Denis Napthine and the outgoing MP she was seeking to replace, Joe McCracken. Two of her central campaign issues were opposition to the government’s Emergency Services and Volunteer Fund and the rollout of high-voltage cables to transmit renewable power.
Opposition to transmission lines has also fuelled anti-government conspiracy theories within extremist and sovereign citizen movements.
The party’s local electors and state council delegates will gather this weekend to finalise preselections for the upper house western region and western metropolitan seats. McArthur has nominated for the No.1 spot in the western region, and Marro, until this week, had nominated for the No.2 spot.
The Liberal Party, which at past elections was dogged by scandals surrounding poorly vetted candidates, has since improved its scrutiny of candidates. The applicant review committee which oversees this process last week interviewed all preselection candidates for the western region.
Marro, who founded a paddock-to-plate business at her family farm near Mount Boulton, is well-connected within Western District communities which for generations have strongly supported the Victorian Liberal Party. That support is now being tested by the rise of One Nation.
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Rachel Eddie is a Victorian state political reporter for The Age. Contact her at [email protected], [email protected], or via Signal at @RachelEddie.99Connect via X or email.
Chip Le Grand leads our state politics reporting team. He previously served as the paper’s chief reporter and is a journalist of 30 years’ experience.Connect via email.


























