Queensland state election, 2006

Queensland state election, 2006



* [http://www.ecq.qld.gov.au/elections/state/state2006/results/summary.html Figures obtained from ECQ Website] .

tate of the parties before the election

Since April 2006, the ALP held 60 of the 89 seats in the Legislative Assembly, the Coalition 23 seats (16 National and seven Liberal), along with five Independents and one member of the One Nation Party. Thus in order to win an outright majority (45 seats), the Coalition would have needed to win an additional 22 seats from the ALP, the Independents or One Nation, assuming that they retained all of their own seats. This would have required a uniform swing against Labor of approximately 8% (such swings are very rare).

Sitting Labor member for Noosa, Cate Molloy, had resigned from the Labor Party following her disendorsement as a Labor candidate, which in turn followed her repudiation of the state government's plans to build a dam on the Mary River at Traveston. Molloy recontested the seat as an Independent.

Members who did not recontest their seats

A number of members of parliament retired at this election:

*Tom Barton: Waterford, ALP
*Darryl Briskey: Cleveland, ALP
*Dr Lesley Clark: Barron River, ALP
*Nita Cunningham: Bundaberg, ALP
*Jim Fouras: Ashgrove, ALP
*Don Livingstone: Ipswich West, ALP
*Tony McGrady: Mount Isa, ALP
*Gordon Nuttall: Sandgate, ALP
*Henry Palaszczuk: Inala, ALP
*Bob Quinn: Robina, Liberal
*Terry Sullivan: Stafford, ALP
*Marc Rowell: Hinchinbrook, Nationals

Campaign

From mid-2005, after the revelation of the Jayant Patel scandal, the issue of health has become a focus of controversy, damaging to the Beattie government. After several inquiries and industrial disputes, a restructure of Queensland Health took place, and the state government is currently lobbying the federal government for more doctor training places in universities for Queensland.

Other issues of importance to the electorate include environmental management and land clearing, asbestos in state schools, the provision of transportation and infrastructure to rural and regional areas, and the management of South East Queensland's population growth.

Results summary

* [http://www.ecq.qld.gov.au/elections/state/state2006/results/summary.html Figures obtained from ECQ Website]

Result

The election result was disappointing for the Coalition. It failed to make significant gains from Labor, despite the fact that the Government had been in office for eight years and had been mired in a series of scandals in its third term. It also failed to make headway against the Independents which still held many safe rural conservative seats, winning back only Gympie. Recent instability in the Coalition, combined with a poor media performance by inexperienced Liberal leader Bruce Flegg was seen as being responsible for the result. In addition, Premier Peter Beattie remained personally popular. With Labor’s huge majority largely intact, it was seen as being unlikely that the Coalition would be able to win the next election.

eats changing hands

The Labor government regained three seats that it had lost in by-elections during 2005 and 2006, taking Chatsworth and Redcliffe from the Liberals and Gaven from the Nationals. The Liberals gained Clayfield, Kawana and Noosa from Labor, while the Nationals gained Bundaberg from Labor and Gympie from Independent Elisa Roberts.

The Coalition parties and the Australian Greens saw their primary vote rise following the demise of the Australian Democrats and One Nation, while Labor suffered a very slight swing against it.

eats won by the ALP

*Albert (retain)
*Algester (retain)
*Ashgrove (retain)
*Aspley (retain)
*Barron River (retain)
*Brisbane Central (retain)
*Broadwater (retain)
*Bulimba (retain)
*Bundamba (retain)
*Burleigh (retain)
*Cairns (retain)
*Capalaba (retain)
*Chatsworth (gain from Libs)
*Cleveland (retain)
*Cook (retain)
*Everton (retain)
*Ferny Grove (retain)
*Fitzroy (retain)
*Gaven (gain from Nats)
*Glass House (retain)
*Greenslopes (retain)
*Hervey Bay (retain)
*Inala (retain)
*Indooroopilly (retain)
*Ipswich (retain)
*Ipswich West (retain)
*Kallangur (retain)
*Keppel (retain)
*Kurwongbah (retain)
*Logan (retain)
*Lytton (retain)
*Mackay (retain)
*Mansfield (retain)
*Mount Coot-tha (retain)
*Mount Gravatt (retain)
*Mount Isa (retain)
*Mount Ommaney (retain)
*Mudgeeraba (retain)
*Mulgrave (retain)
*Mundingburra (retain)
*Murrumba (retain)
*Nudgee (retain)
*Pumicestone (retain)
*Redcliffe (gain from Libs)
*Redlands (retain)
*Rockhampton (retain)
*Sandgate (retain)
*South Brisbane (retain)
*Southport (retain)
*Springwood (retain)
*Stafford (retain)
*Stretton (retain)
*Thuringowa (retain)
*Toowoomba North (retain)
*Townsville (retain)
*Waterford (retain)
*Whitsunday (retain)
*Woodridge (retain)
*Yeerongpilly (retain)

eats won by the Nationals

*Beaudesert (retain)
*Bundaberg (gain from ALP)
*Burdekin (retain)
*Burnett (retain)
*Callide (retain)
*Charters Towers (retain)
*Cunningham (retain)
*Darling Downs (retain)
*Gregory (retain)
*Gympie (gain from Elisa Roberts)
*Hinchinbrook (retain)
*Lockyer (retain)
*Maroochydore (retain)
*Mirani (retain)
*Southern Downs (retain)
*Toowoomba South (retain)
*Warrego (retain)

eats won by the Liberal Party

*Caloundra (retain)
*Clayfield (gain from ALP)
*Currumbin (retain)
*Kawana (gain from ALP)
*Moggill (retain)
*Noosa (gain from ALP)
*Robina (retain)
*Surfers Paradise (retain)

eats won by the One Nation Party

*Tablelands (retain)

eats won by Independents

*Gladstone (retain)
*Maryborough (retain)
*Nanango (retain)
*Nicklin (retain)

Queensland Greens call for proportional representation

Following the release of election results that saw the Labor Party gain 66.3% of the available seats with 46.9% of the vote, the Liberal Party get 9% of the seats with 20% of the vote, One Nation with one seat and less than 1% of the vote and the Greens unrepresented with nearly 8% of the vote, the Queensland Greens issued a press release on their website calling for Proportional Representation in Queensland [http://qld.greens.org.au/media-releases/greens-call-for-proportional-representation-in-queensland] . The press release is part of an ongoing effort by the Australian and Queensland Greens to see Proportional Representation implemented on both state and national levels. The Greens have never won representation in Queensland's state parliament.

ee also

*Members of the Queensland Legislative Assembly, 2006-2009

References

* [http://www.abc.net.au/elections/qld/2006/guide/summary.htm Election analysis] by Antony Green of the ABC


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