David Leyonhjelm quits: Controversial senator who praised migrants for 'delivering his pizzas and working at 7-Eleven' abandons federal politics to take on Mark Latham at state level

  • Liberal Democrats senator David Leyonhjelm will quit federal politics next month
  • Controversial senator plans to contest the NSW state election on March 23
  • He's set to run against  former Labor leader Mark Latham in the upper house
  • Senator Leyonhjelm is making to focus on 'nanny-state issues'

Liberal Democrats senator David Leyonhjelm will quit federal politics next month to contest the NSW state election.

The move is set to pit Senator Leyonhjelm against one-time Liberal Democrats member and former Labor leader Mark Latham, who is running for One Nation in the state's upper house at the March 23 election.

The crossbench senator was first elected to the upper house at the 2013 federal poll and was re-elected at the 2016 double dissolution election.

Senator Leyonhjelm told Sky News on Monday night he's making to move to state politics to focus more on 'nanny-state issues'.

'Red-tape issues are the ones that really annoy me and get up my nose,' he said.

'For example liquor licensing, where you can smoke, where you can vape, gambling, lock-out laws, assisted suicide.'

The legalisation of cannabis will also be an election issue for Senator Leyonhjelm.

'I think there's much more hope of achieving that at the state level,' he said.

'The police waste an enormous amount of time chasing people growing a bit of a dope.'

The senator last made headlines in December when he made a controversial speech about migrants in parliament, thanking 'young brown men' for delivering his groceries, pizzas and online purchases as he praised the men for 'not whinging about a brown pay gap'.  

Senator Leyonhjelm said he wanted to use the speech to give thanks to 'a group of Australians who may be ignored or worse but who make a great contribution' to the nation. 

'Let me say thank you to Australia's young brown men,' he told parliament. 

'The young brown men I come across in my day-to-day life are often in low-paid jobs. They drive me in their Ubers and taxis. They deliver my online purchases, my groceries and my pizza. 

'They serve me at my local 7-Eleven, at my local service station and at my local restaurants.'

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Senator David Leyonhjelm to quit federal politics

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