Gareth Ward is suspended from the NSW Parliament over sexual assault claims

MP is SUSPENDED from Parliament after he was charged with sexually assaulting a boy, 17, and man, 27

  • Gareth Ward has been suspended from NSW Parliament pending court case
  • Kiama MP was charged with indecent assault against 17-year-old boy
  • He’s also accused of abusing a 27-year-old man in Sydney in September 2015 

Former Liberal MP Gareth Ward has been suspended from the NSW Parliament after he was charged with the sexual assault of a teenage boy and a man.

Police allege Mr Ward indecently assaulted a 17-year-old boy at Meroo Meadow in February 2013, and sexually abused a 27-year-old man in Sydney in September 2015.

Acting Premier Paul Toole on Thursday moved the motion to suspend the Kiama MP from parliament until the outcome of criminal proceedings.

Gareth Ward has been charged over allegations of sexual violence against a 17-year-old boy and a 27-year-old man 

Mr Toole noted the now independent MP ‘had been charged with five criminal offences’.

The motion received bipartisan support in parliament and was passed despite criticism from the Labor opposition.

Earlier on Thursday, Mr Toole said the government had been waiting on legal advice over suspending Mr Ward without pay, but would move ahead with a motion to suspend him.

‘The actions we’ve taken this week as a government have been decisive,’ he told reporters.

‘We will continue to take … action on his salary, his remuneration and his entitlements.

‘These sexual charges that have been made are quite serious.

‘This is also about protecting those victims so they can have their day in court as well.’

Mr Ward, who has repeatedly denied the allegations, said he’d been suspended ‘based on allegations that I completely deny and that have yet to be tested in a court of law’.

Detectives from the Child Abuse and Sex Crimes Squad in May established Strike Force Condello to investigate the historic allegations against Mr Ward

Detectives from the Child Abuse and Sex Crimes Squad in May established Strike Force Condello to investigate the historic allegations against Mr Ward

‘I am extremely disappointed with that decision,’ he said in a statement on Thursday.

‘The effect of the decision is that I am unable to speak and vote in parliament.

‘I will, however, continue to represent and lobby for my local community as its democratically elected member of parliament.

‘As challenging a time as this is for me personally, I have an important job to do and I intend to get on with it.’

Thursday’s vote came after NSW Premier Dominic Perrottet called for Mr Ward to resign or be expelled.

However, the government instead moved to suspend him after receiving legal advice his expulsion could jeopardise any trial.

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