Kimberly/ 2025 West Australian state election

Here is the Traffic Light Voting Guide for your electorate. You can download, print, and fill it out at home.

Spend some time carefully numbering the white boxes before you head off to vote. When you arrive at the voting booth spread out your Traffic Light Voting Guide and transfer your numbered choices onto the official ballot papers. Alternatively you can use your phone to bring up our website and follow our advice for climate action.

Legislative Assembly Traffic Light Voting Guide

Legislative Council Traffic Light Voting Guide

Scroll down further to check out any Green Light Candidate profiles if who have nominated in your electorate.

The team at Vote Climate One encourages all candidates to support the 3Rs and the Climate Rescue Accord to underpin any decisions in the West Australian House of Assembly and Legislative Council relating to action on the climate emergency.

If you have any information which may inform our candidate assessments please use our contact form at the bottom of this page or phone Rob on 0427 580803

Kimberley Green Light Candidates

Jaala Ozies (Greens)

I have migrant roots in Broome dating back more than 130 years. My Djukun roots in Broome for millennia. I was raised in the Kimberley and understand the challenges of living in a remote isolated region.

As a Djukun woman I have a responsibility to care for Country. The Kimberley is facing its biggest threat ever from the oil and gas industries and the industrialisation of this pristine environment. Our ancestors kept Country intact and we need to continue to care for Country for our future generations.

I have family in Broome through to Kununurra, and a son who is now 28. I have many ties with people across the Kimberley.

Over the years I’ve worked in numerous professions including hairdressing and social work, and right now I’m studying a Master of Business. As a qualified social worker, I advocate strongly for the voices of Kimberley to be heard, in particular focusing on inequality and disrupting the avenues of power so as to better share the riches of this country.

Homelessness is on the rise in the Kimberley at an alarming rate, and the effect on our community is devastating. Every day I support people who are worried about being able to secure affordable housing. Successive governments have critically underinvested in social housing, particularly homes that serve the needs of Aboriginal people, single people, child-free couples and older people. 

I am also very concerned about the drive to industrialise the Kimberley, and am passionately opposed to fracking. Despite the critical threat fracking poses to the precious lifeblood of this land, the Kimberley is the only place in WA where fracking is allowed. We cannot continue burning fossil fuels, and we cannot allow fracking to destroy our precious environment.

So if you want change in the Kimberley, you have to vote for it!