“We have a lot of fights ahead of us, the most important fight is to protect our children,” he told protesters.
Mr Kelly has been admonished in the past for his unsubstantiated claims around COVID-19 and vaccines.
As the crowd broke into chants of “Kelly, Kelly, Kelly”, Mr Kelly said the party would be running candidates in all 151 seats at the next federal election and claimed the party would “bring Daniel Andrews to his knees”.
“We are being governed my medical bureaucrats that are part of a mad, insane cult,” Mr Kelly said.
Mr Finn told crowd that they must “kill this bill”.
“This bill, it’s so evil. It’s so wrong. It’s something that must be defeated,” he said. “Despot Dan wants to become an emperor. Enough is enough.”
Mr Finn also voiced his support for Sunshine-based GP Dr Mark Hobart, who The Age revealed last week was the subject of an investigation into fraudulent vaccine records.
Some speakers pointed to the QAnon conspiracy theory, including singer Claire Woodley, daughter of The Seekers band member Bruce Woodley, who addressed the crowd saying she wanted to dedicate a performance of I am Australia to the “victims of satanic ritual abuse” – a common talking point in Qanon.
Saturday’s protests follow several other large CBD demonstrations against vaccine mandates and pandemic legislation, including one last week when more than 3000 people took to the streets.
The new pandemic laws, which are set to replace state-of-emergency powers when they expire on December 15, will give the premier and health minister of the day the authority to declare a pandemic and make public health orders.
They will also curtail the role of the chief health officer.
The Victorian Bar and 60 top silks have joined an open letter calling on the Victorian Parliament to amend the bill or vote against it, arguing it would give politicians “a blank cheque to rule by decree” in its current form.
The Public Health and Wellbeing Amendment (pandemic management) Bill 2021 passed the lower house last month, and the government is now hoping it will pass the upper house next week with the support of three crossbenchers.
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The opposition, which has openly lashed the legislation as “the most dangerous piece of legislation” it has seen, has vowed to derail the process by refusing leave to debate the laws, delaying the debate until at least Wednesday.
Mr Andrews has previously said the legislation is an improvement to human rights and government transparency, but lawyers claim the laws will give politicians “a blank cheque to rule by decree” and are unlikely to achieve the outcomes promised in its current form.
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