A candidate in the upcoming Wentworth by-election wants to stop 'westies' from visiting Australia's wealthiest suburbs.

Robert Callanan, an independent who wants to replace former prime minister Malcolm Turnbull in Parliament, said visitors to Bondi Beach from Sydney's western suburbs were 'very annoying'.

'Always causing major issues in North Bondi. They are like blowflies,' he told Daily Mail Australia on Monday.

A candidate in the upcoming Wentworth by-election wants to stop lower-class 'westies' from visiting Australia's wealthiest suburbs (Bondi Beach pictured)

Robert Callanan, an independent who wants to replace former PM Malcolm Turnbull in parliament, said visitors to Bondi Beach from Sydney's western suburbs were 'very annoying'

'When you're trying to relax and enjoy a coffee by the beach, they are very disturbing in that you can't hold a conversation with their loud music and talking.'

Mr Callanan, a tax accountant who was this month disendorsed by the Katter's Australian Party over his links to a high-class brothel, has an $18billion solution, involving infrastructure bonds, to keep 'westies' out of Sydney's eastern suburbs.

He wants investors to fund an inland irrigation scheme that he hoped would create 20,000 farming jobs away from Sydney and add $100billion to the economy.

'This policy will get the westies out of the elite electorate so that the elite won't be disturbed while they're sipping their lattes and eating their smashed avo on toast,' he said.

Mr Callanan has an $18billion solution, involving infrastructure bonds, to keep 'westies' out of Sydney's eastern suburbs (Bondi Beach swimmers pictured)

Mr Callanan, a tax accountant who was this month disendorsed by the Katter's Australian Party, said 'westies' often talked too loud at Bondi Beach (pictured from the southern end)

The 45-year-old businessman, who lives at upmarket Bellevue Hill in the electorate, said he could tell the rude people in his area were visitors from Sydney's western suburbs by 'the loudness in their voice' - and didn't care if he was called a snob.

'We are what we are,' he said.

Foreign backpackers, however, often create a lot of mess on Bondi Beach on Christmas and New Year's days.

Mr Callanan, who describes himself in pamphlets as 'pro-business, pro-family', was earlier this month disendorsed by the conservative Katter's Australian Party, after it was revealed he was the former director of a company linked to a high-class Sydney escort service.

The independent candidate is proposing an $18billion irrigation scheme in the bush so westies don't visit Sydney's eastern suburbs and interrupt the 'elites' eating smashed avocado

He claimed his connection with The Penthouse - The Ultimate Gentlemen's Club would in fact help him politically as he campaigned in the upcoming Wentworth by-election as an independent.

With parts of western Sydney, including Lakemba and Auburn, home to Australia's largest Muslim population, he is also proposing a binding plebiscite on banning Muslim immigration in a bid to 'protect Australia from terrorist threats'.

'It's like a strengthening of counter-terrorism laws,' he said.

'Mainly I just have a look around the world at what goes on with other terrorist attacks and the primary source of those attacks and the people that cause those attacks.'

The disendorsed Katter's Australian Party candidate also wants a plebiscite on banning Muslim immigration

Mr Callanan is one of 16 candidates running in the October 20 Wentworth by-election following Mr Turnbull's resignation from Parliament.

He drew the top spot on the ballot as a Katter's Australian Party candidate, but has long odds against Liberal candidate Dave Sharma and fellow independent Dr Kerryn Phelps, a former head of the Australian Medical Association.

Sydney's east is home to Australia's most expensive suburbs of Point Piper and Vaucluse, with harbour-view mansions often selling for more than $20million.

Even duplex houses are expensive, with one at North Bondi earlier this year selling for $4million, or more than four times Sydney's median house price, even in a slowing real estate market.