‘My reputation on the line’: Fatima Payman hits back at PM’s challenge

Fatima Payman is not afraid of taking on Anthony Albanese in his inner-Sydney seat, saying she would relish an “electoral arm wrestle” with the prime minister.

The independent senator, who quit Labor in July over differences in approach to the Israel-Gaza conflict, is set to launch her own party this week.

While her Senate term lasts until 2028, she will look to run candidates across the country for the upper house and in some lower house marginal seats.

Mr Albanese told the AFR on Monday the former Labor senator should “test democratic support for her actions by contesting the next election herself under the banner of her new political party” – in other words, quit Parliament and run again, not on Labor’s ticket.

But Senator Payman said the point of establishing the party was to test the support for her actions.

That meant not just in WA but across the nation.

“My reputation will be on the line,” she said.

“If the PM really wants an electoral arm wrestle, we may even run a candidate in Grayndler.

“This will be a full-body-contact competition and I’m not backing down.”

Unlike other crossbenchers who have established their own parties – such as Jacqui Lambie, Tammy Tyrrell, Clive Palmer and Pauline Hanson – she does not intend to name her party after herself.

She is keeping the name under wraps for now but said it would be an “aha moment” for people.

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