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Kyle Hoppitt is an Australian politician who has served as a senator for the state of Victoria in the Senate since 2025. Prior to his entry into federal politics, he was a Baptist preacher and small business owner. He is a member of the Liberal Party.

Political career
In 2019, Hoppitt sought preselection as a Liberal candidate for the Senate in Victoria on the Coalition ticket's third position, but was unsuccessful, losing to David Van. He ultimately contested Victoria at the 2019 Australian Senate election in the fifth position of the Coalition ticket, as one of five Liberals, but was not elected.

Following the resignation of Mitch Fifield from the Senate in August 2019, Hoppitt was one of the candidates seeking the Liberal Party's nomination to fill the vacancy. He competed for the seat with recently defeated House of Representatives members Sarah Henderson and Chris Crewther, farmer Greg Mirabella, former Legislative Council member Inga Peulich, mental health advocate John MacIsaac, and academic Mimmie Watts. Henderson went on to win the contest, and was appointed to the Senate later in September. It was reported in both The Australian and ABC News that Hoppitt-voting delegates would prefer Mirabella to Henderson. At the vote, upon the exclusion of Crewther and MacIsaac, Hoppitt and Peulich were described as "having won about 100 votes between them" out of the votes of more than 400 delegates. Ultimately, in the final distribution, Henderson defeated Mirabella 234 votes to 197.

In November 2023, Hoppitt was again preselected by the Liberal Party to be one of its candidates for the Senate in Victoria, this time in the third position. The preselection was conducted a few months after the resignation of Van from the party in June 2023. Hoppitt defeated three other candidates for the preselection – Mirabella, who had been defeated at the 2022 election since being appointed to the Senate in 2021; Karyn Sobels, a former president of the Victorian Chamber of Commerce and Industry; and Jarrod Bingham, a previously independent political candidate. He was described as securing the nomination with the backing of the "religious right" of the Victorian division, while Mirabella and Sobels had the endorsements of Peter Dutton and John Pesutto, respectively. Hoppitt was reported as having received "about 187 votes to Mirabella's 173".

Personal life
Hoppitt has been described as a "conservative Christian". He is married and runs a small business, holds a degree in economics, and has previously served in the Australian Army Reserve.