Court rules suspension of former Whittlesea mayor Aidan McLindon ‘invalid’

·

The Supreme Court of Victoria has ruled that the Allan government’s suspension of former Whittlesea mayor Aidan McLindon was invalid, finding he was denied procedural fairness before the decision was made.

In a judgement delivered on Tuesday, Justice Steven Moore found former Local Government Minister Nick Staikos’ six-month suspension of McLindon in 2025 could not stand because municipal monitors failed to provide full details of the allegations against him.

“The order made to suspend the plaintiff for six months was invalid,” Justice Moore ruled.

Mr McLindon had challenged the decision in court after he was suspended as councillor for Kirrip Ward, with the mayoralty subsequently declared vacant.

The monitors alleged McLindon made public comments considered racist, homophobic and transphobic, and claimed his conduct posed “a serious risk to the health and safety of Councillors or members of Council staff.”

However, the court found the specific allegations were not properly put to him before the suspension recommendation was made. Lawyers representing Staikos had earlier conceded the monitors failed to provide procedural fairness.

The court also rejected arguments that Staikos later corrected the issue by allowing McLindon to respond to the monitors’ report.

During proceedings, McLindon defended previous comments regarding transgender flags in childcare settings.

“I said that trans flags should come out of childcare centres and kindergartens,” he said. “We should not be putting these things on children.”

Justice Moore stressed the case focused on the legality of the Minister’s decision, not the political debate surrounding the allegations.

McLindon previously ran against former Premier Daniel Andrews in the seat of Mulgrave at the 2022 Victorian election.

Source: Herald Sun.

Share:

KEEP UP TO DATE WITH TGH

By subscribing you accept our Terms of Service and Privacy Policy.

Latest News

Greece records longest working week in the EU, Eurostat data shows

Workers in Greece recorded the longest average working week in the European Union in 2025, according to new Eurostat figures.

Cannabis use among Greek teens reaches 25-year high

Cannabis use among teenagers in Greece has climbed to its highest level in 25 years, according to new findings released.

Metallica fans shook Athens harder than Iron Maiden, seismologists find

Fans of Metallica generated stronger seismic activity than supporters of Iron Maiden during recent Athens concerts, according to a study.

Investigation underway after historic bell disappears from Pylos fortress

Authorities in southwestern Greece are investigating the disappearance of a commemorative bell from a chapel inside the historic Niokastro fortress in Pylos.

Standoff grows over reopening of Kalavryta’s historic rack railway

A disagreement has emerged between the Greek government and local authorities in Kalavryta over the reopening of the famous Diakofto–Kalavryta rack railway.

You May Also Like

Much-loved Kytherian yiayia, Vasiliki Megaloconomos, celebrates her 100th birthday

Much-loved Kytherian yiayia, Vasiliki Megaloconomos, celebrated her 100th birthday on April 20 surrounded by her family.

Official logo released to mark 200th anniversary of Greek Revolution in Australia

The Pan-Australian National Council for the 200th anniversary of the Greek Revolution, has unveiled the logo to be used at commemoration events in Australia.

Australian PM Anthony Albanese sends Easter message to Orthodox Christians

Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese has extended his Easter message to Orthodox Christians across Australia.