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Victorian Liberal MP Moira Deeming has lodged a legal action against the party’s state president, Brian Loughnane. Photograph: Joel Carrett/AAP View image in fullscreen Victorian Liberal MP Moira Deeming has lodged a legal action against the party’s state president, Brian Loughnane. Photograph: Joel Carrett/AAP Moira Deeming launches lawsuit against Victorian Liberal president as party meets to decide her future Scandal has engulfed the state party as Deeming resists calls to apologise to fellow MP Matthew Guy over an assault allegation A Liberal MP has launched an 11th-hour court challenge against her own party before a meeting to decide her fate after she made an assault allegation against a former leader. Moira Deeming has lodged a legal action against Victorian Liberal party state president, Brian Loughnane, which is listed to be heard in the Victorian supreme court on Friday morning. The latest round of Liberal infighting comes less than five months out from the 28 November state election, with party executives, including Loughnane, planning to meet on Friday evening to determine Deeming’s candidacy. The upper house MP had made a police complaint against a colleague, Matthew Guy, alleging that he had assaulted her by grabbing her “violently” in a headlock at a gala dinner on 23 May. Victoria police investigated and found “there was no offence detected”. Guy has demanded a public apology from Deeming. “There was no ambiguity,” he said. “I did not do what was alleged. The CCTV proves this. It did from the start, and Victoria Police agree.” Deeming has since claimed she misunderstood the meaning of headlock but has refused to apologise. She has been invited to the state executive meeting to tell her side of the story but whether she attends is yet to be seen. The opposition leader, Jess Wilson, on Thursday refused to answer questions about the process, but told reporters Guy’s reputation had been harmed and she had directly asked Deeming to apologise. “I think he deserves an apology,” she said. “That is the right thing to do, and Moira has decided that’s not the case. And now the state executive will meet.” Pauline Hanson has declared she would not offer Deeming a position at One Nation. The senator said Deeming’s refusal to apologise to Guy showed the first-term MP could not “admit that she got it wrong”. “You don’t do that to your fellow colleagues,” she told 3AW radio. The scandal is yet another flare-up of what the public would see as disunity and disorganisation in the party, said a Monash University political scientist, Zareh Ghazarian. “This is arguably the most critical point for the Liberal leadership right now to clear their internal problems,” he said. “This has to be resolved as quickly as possible because it’s already taken up a lot of political coverage … it has hobbled the party significantly.” In a statement, Deeming’s lawyer Tim Houweling said his client’s complaint had been made “honestly, in good faith and only as a matter of
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