Senate candidate reflects on criminal past

A BALLARAT lawyer who spent at least 20 months in prison for drug and white-collar-related offending is running for the Senate in May’s Federal Election.

Jordan Dittloff, 38, was in Mildura on Friday and Saturday, 13 months after being endorsed as the Libertarians’ lead Senate candidate for Victoria.

The former Young Liberals president was jailed in 2016 for stealing $277,993.58 from 47 clients of his Colac-based travel agency, and for trafficking drugs in Melbourne.

Court reports at the time revealed that at the height of his drug dependency, he would use hard drugs including ice and cocaine three to four times a day at least once a week.

Mr Dittloff said heading to prison was the rock bottom experience from which he started to rebuild his life.

“I completed part of a business degree when I was in prison, I completed that degree on parole,” he said.

“I then ran small businesses very successfully for the Beechworth Bakery in Bendigo and Ballarat, managing their bakeries there, leading a team of 30 people.”

While at the bakery Mr Dittloff studied postgraduate law full time and finished a law degree, and was recently granted a compliance certificate after meeting the threshold of admission to legal practice.

“That was a really hard threshold to pass with my past criminal record,” he said. “They really made me run the gauntlet, as they should have.

“I’m really, really proud of what I’ve been able to do in the last 10 years, I’ve repaid $40,000 to victims of my offending at the time.

“People who were clients of my failed travel agency business, I’ve still got debts to repay, but I’ve repaid about 15 per cent of what was owed to those people, so that’s been a really important part of my rehabilitation as well.”

Mr Dittloff has experience from what many would consider a traditional political apprenticeship.

He first joined the Liberal Party in 2009 assisting with now Victorian’ Senator Sarah Henderson’s election campaigns in the Federal seat of Corangamite in 2010 and 2013.

He said he left the party in 2014 after being disillusioned by what he viewed as tribalism between the major parties.

“How a proposed piece of legislation or policy was judged, it was based on who proposed it rather than what the merits of the idea were, or what the outcome would be,” Mr Dittloff said.

“For a great many people involved in major party politics it was all just a political football, it was all tribalism, red team bad, blue team good.

“That wasn’t something I was interested in putting my energy and involvement into.”

Mr Dittloff said Canberra needed people with real life experience, people who have made mistakes but learned from them, people interested in policy and principle, and people who were solutions-focused rather than outrage-focused.

“The Libertarians see ourselves as being able to almost be the Greens of the centre-right,” he said.

“We aim to try to influence the decisions and policies of any government, in the case of a Liberal government we have the ability to compete with them and to, through the forces of competition, influence their policy positions.

“I also am very passionate about Federal issues and I think that at the Federal level we have a lot of really, really poor decision making, a lot of short term policy thought, a lot of pushing hard decisions down the road.

“I see our country as really heading down the path of short term thinking, of lack of political leadership, lack of vision, and I think that at the end of the day our kids and grandkids are the ones that are going to pay that price.”

Digital Editions


  • Spiritual and literal journeys

    Spiritual and literal journeys

    FROM transformative journeys across the world to the inner landscapes of letting go, seeking meaning, exploring hidden traditions, and embracing joy, books can chart many…

More News

  • Grants for farmers doing it tough

    Grants for farmers doing it tough

    FARMS affected by drought and bushfire could benefit from the second round of funding from the Look Over the Farm Gate program, which aims to support community events that focus…

  • 75 years of love: a diamond that never dulls

    75 years of love: a diamond that never dulls

    MERBEIN local Eric Wilson started giving his wife, Dot, flowers on Valentine’s Day 35 years into their marriage. And it’s a tradition that’s helped keep the 75-year marriage strong for…

  • New start for heart clinic

    New start for heart clinic

    MILDURA Base Public Hospital’s cardiac sonographer, Amy Stanbrook, and her new ultrasound machine, nicknamed Lexie, will be checking hearts in the new cardiac unit, which was funded by the Mildura…

  • Mildura centre delivers the goods

    Mildura centre delivers the goods

    THE Mildura Delivery Centre in Orange Avenue is a hive of activity from 5am most mornings. The staff at Australia Post sort and deliver all kinds of weird and wonderful…

  • Ambo returns home

    Ambo returns home

    MILDURA’S newest paramedic has hit the ground after running stepping into her graduate position on her own home turf. Mildura-raised Sammy recently landed her new graduate paramedic position at Ambulance…

  • Accused stab threat teen bailed after breach

    Accused stab threat teen bailed after breach

    A TEENAGE girl alleged to have planned to harm and kill students and staff of a Mildura secondary college last year has been accused of stealing a relative’s ute and…

  • Exchange programs all about opportunity

    Exchange programs all about opportunity

    MEMBERS of Mildura Deakin Rotary Club are hosting two exchange students this year, making it about 30 participants since the club was established in 1994. “Our involvement in the program…

  • Bail refused for aggravated burglary

    Bail refused for aggravated burglary

    A MILDURA man accused of aggravated burglary 10 days after he was released from custody for previous theft convictions has been refused bail. The Mildura Magistrates Court heard of an…

  • Sweethearts campaign for health funds

    Sweethearts campaign for health funds

    A CHILDREN’S heart health charity is encouraging Australians to donate this Valentine’s Day to support children suffering from congenital heart heart defects. This past week HeartKids has assembled for their…

  • Farrer MP Ley resigns as Liberals knife their first female leader

    Farrer MP Ley resigns as Liberals knife their first female leader

    THE Liberals’ first female leader Sussan Ley will resign from Parliament after she was knifed by conservative Angus Taylor nine months into the job.  Ms Ley expressed gratitude after she…