2006 Queensland state election













Queensland state election, 2006







← 2004
9 September 2006 (2006-09-09)
2009 →


All 89 seats in the Legislative Assembly of Queensland
45 Assembly seats were needed for a majority

























































 
First party
Second party
 

Peter Beattie August 2013 (cropped).jpg

LawSpr.jpg
Leader

Peter Beattie

Lawrence Springborg
Party

Labor

National/Liberal coalition
Leader since
20 February 1996 (1996-02-20)
4 February 2003
Leader's seat

Brisbane Central

Southern Downs
Last election
63 seats
20 seats
Seats won
59 seats
25 seats
Seat change

Decrease4

Increase5
Percentage
46.92%
37.92%
Swing

Decrease0.09

Increase2.46








Premier before election

Peter Beattie
Labor



Elected Premier

Peter Beattie
Labor




An election was held in the Australian state of Queensland on 9 September 2006 to elect the 89 members of the state's Legislative Assembly, after being announced by Premier Peter Beattie on 15 August 2006.


The election saw the incumbent Labor government led by Premier Peter Beattie defeat the National-Liberal Coalition led by Lawrence Springborg and Bruce Flegg respectively, and gain a fourth consecutive term in office. Beattie thus became the first Labor Premier of Queensland to win four consecutive elections since William Forgan Smith did so in the 1930s. Had Beattie served out his fourth term, he would have become the second-longest serving Queensland Premier, after Sir Joh Bjelke-Petersen. After the election, Springborg resigned as Opposition Leader, being replaced by Jeff Seeney.




Contents






  • 1 Key dates


  • 2 Results


    • 2.1 Mackerras pendulum




  • 3 State of the parties before the election


    • 3.1 Members who did not recontest their seats




  • 4 Issues


  • 5 Polling


  • 6 Campaign


  • 7 Seats changing hands


  • 8 See also


  • 9 References


  • 10 External links





Key dates



































Date
Event
15 August 2006
Writs were issued by the Governor to proceed with an election[1]
19 August 2006
Close of electoral rolls
22 August 2006
Close of nominations
9 September 2006
Polling day, between the hours of 8am and 6pm
13 September 2006

Beattie Ministry reconstituted
22 September 2006
Writ returned and results formally declared
10 October 2006
52nd Parliament convened


Results



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 Dr 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.































































































































Queensland state election, 9 September 2006[2]
Legislative Assembly
<< 2004–2009 >>


Enrolled voters
2,484,479


Votes cast
2,247,728


Turnout
90.47
–0.97
Informal votes
43,657

Informal
2.08
+0.09
Summary of votes by party
Party
Primary votes
%
Swing
Seats
Change
 

Labor
1,032,617
46.92
–0.09

59
– 4
 

Liberal
442,453
20.10
+1.60
8
+ 3
 

Nationals
392,124
17.82
+0.86
17
+ 2
 

Greens
175,798
7.99
+1.23
0
± 0
 

Family First
41,659
1.89
+1.89
0
± 0
 

One Nation
13,207
0.60
–4.28
1
± 0
 

Independent
103,022
4.68
–1.15
4
- 1
Total
2,200,880
 
 
89
 

Two-party-preferred
 

Labor

55.0



 

Liberal

45.0



* The two-party preferred summary is an estimate by Antony Green using a methodology by Malcolm Mackerras.


Mackerras pendulum


The following is a Mackerras pendulum for the election.


"Safe" seats require a swing of more than 10 per cent to change, "fairly safe" seats require a swing of between 6 and 10 per cent, while "marginal" seats require a swing of less than 6 per cent.















































































































































































































































































































































































LABOR SEATS (59)[3]

Marginal

Cleveland

Phil Weightman
ALP
0.5%

Chatsworth

Chris Bombolas
ALP
0.8%

Hervey Bay

Andrew McNamara
ALP
1.8%

Indooroopilly

Ronan Lee
ALP
2.4%

Mudgeeraba

Dianne Reilly
ALP
2.9%

Gaven

Phil Gray
ALP
3.1%

Whitsunday

Jan Jarratt
ALP
4.4%

Aspley

Bonny Barry
ALP
4.6%

Barron River

Steve Wettenhall
ALP
5.1%

Broadwater

Peta-Kaye Croft
ALP
5.2%

Springwood

Barbara Stone
ALP
5.2%

Pumicestone

Carryn Sullivan
ALP
5.4%

Redcliffe

Lillian van Litsenburg
ALP
5.5%

Fairly safe

Redlands

John English
ALP
6.9%

Keppel

Paul Hoolihan
ALP
7.2%

Glass House

Carolyn Male
ALP
7.7%

Mansfield

Phil Reeves
ALP
7.7%

Ashgrove

Kate Jones
ALP
8.1%

Cairns

Desley Boyle
ALP
8.1%

Burleigh

Christine Smith
ALP
8.3%

Southport

Peter Lawlor
ALP
9.1%

Townsville

Mike Reynolds
ALP
9.1%

Mulgrave

Warren Pitt
ALP
9.9%

Safe

Greenslopes

Gary Fenlon
ALP
10.1%

Everton

Rod Welford
ALP
10.2%

Mount Ommaney

Julie Attwood
ALP
10.2%

Kallangur

Ken Hayward
ALP
10.3%

Toowoomba North

Kerry Shine
ALP
10.4%

Mount Coot-tha

Andrew Fraser
ALP
10.5%

Mundingburra

Lindy Nelson-Carr
ALP
10.5%

Murrumba

Dean Wells
ALP
11.6%

Ferny Grove

Geoff Wilson
ALP
12.1%

Mount Isa

Betty Kiernan
ALP
12.3%

Kurwongbah

Linda Lavarch
ALP
12.4%

Mount Gravatt

Judy Spence
ALP
12.9%

Ipswich West

Wayne Wendt
ALP
13.1%

Yeerongpilly

Simon Finn
ALP
13.8%

Stretton

Stephen Robertson
ALP
14.2%

Brisbane Central

Peter Beattie
ALP
14.8%

Stafford

Stirling Hinchliffe
ALP
14.9%

Cook

Jason O'Brien
ALP
15.1%

Sandgate

Vicky Darling
ALP
15.2%

Waterford

Evan Moorhead
ALP
15.9%

Bulimba

Pat Purcell
ALP
16.2%

Capalaba

Michael Choi
ALP
16.2%

Fitzroy

Jim Pearce
ALP
16.4%

Lytton

Paul Lucas
ALP
16.9%

Albert

Margaret Keech
ALP
17.0%

Thuringowa

Craig Wallace
ALP
17.0%

Mackay

Tim Mulherin
ALP
17.6%

Algester

Karen Struthers
ALP
17.8%

Nudgee

Neil Roberts
ALP
18.3%

South Brisbane

Anna Bligh
ALP
18.4%

Rockhampton

Robert Schwarten
ALP
20.5%

Ipswich

Rachel Nolan
ALP
21.6%

Logan

John Mickel
ALP
23.9%

Bundamba

Jo-Ann Miller
ALP
24.8%

Inala

Annastacia Palaszczuk
ALP
26.3%

Woodridge

Desley Scott
ALP
29.0%




























































































































































































NATIONAL/LIBERAL SEATS (25)

Marginal

Bundaberg

Jack Dempsey
NAT
0.9%

Clayfield

Tim Nicholls
LIB
1.7%

Lockyer

Ian Rickuss
NAT
1.7%

Currumbin

Jann Stuckey
LIB
2.2%

Burdekin

Rosemary Menkens
NAT
2.4%

Robina

Ray Stevens
LIB
2.5%

Hinchinbrook

Andrew Cripps
NAT
3.7%

Caloundra

Mark McArdle
LIB
4.4%

Beaudesert

Kev Lingard
NAT
4.5%

Kawana

Steve Dickson
LIB
5.7%

Fairly safe

Noosa

Glen Elmes
LIB
6.3% v IND

Mirani

Ted Malone
NAT
6.5%

Burnett

Rob Messenger
NAT
7.6%

Moggill

Bruce Flegg
LIB
7.9%

Toowoomba South

Mike Horan
NAT
9.8%

Safe

Maroochydore

Fiona Simpson
NAT
10.7%

Charters Towers

Shane Knuth
NAT
11.0%

Surfers Paradise

John-Paul Langbroek
LIB
12.0%

Cunningham

Stuart Copeland
NAT
16.4%

Gregory

Vaughan Johnson
NAT
18.0%

Gympie

David Gibson
NAT
18.2% v IND

Darling Downs

Ray Hopper
NAT
19.1%

Southern Downs

Lawrence Springborg
NAT
20.3%

Callide

Jeff Seeney
NAT
22.3%

Warrego

Howard Hobbs
NAT
23.3%

CROSSBENCH SEATS (5)

Gladstone

Liz Cunningham
IND
2.0% v ALP

Nanango

Dorothy Pratt
IND
4.2% v NAT

Tablelands

Rosa Lee Long
ONP
19.8% v ALP

Nicklin

Peter Wellington
IND
25.1% v NAT

Maryborough

Chris Foley
IND
32.7% v ALP



State 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



Issues


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 at the election included 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.



Polling


































































































































































Legislative Assembly opinion polling

Primary vote

2PP vote
Date
ALP
LIB
NAT
GRN
OTH
ALP
L/NP
2006 election
46.9%
20.1%
17.8%
8.0%
7.2%
55.0%
45.0%
6–7 Sep 2006
48%
21%
17%
4%
10%
55%
45%
25–28 Aug 2006
52%
20%
16%
2%
10%
58%
42%
Jul–Aug 2006
45%
25%
13%
2%
15%
54%
46%
Apr–Jun 2006
41%
26%
13%
4%
16%
52%
48%
Jan–Mar 2006
40%
28%
14%
4%
14%
50%
50%
Oct–Dec 2005
40%
27%
16%
3%
14%
50%
50%
Aug–Sep 2005
41%
26%
16%
4%
13%
50%
50%
Jul–Aug 2005
40%
27%
15%
3%
15%
50%
50%
Apr–Jun 2005
47%
23%
14%
3%
13%
56%
44%
Jan–Mar 2005
46%
27%
11%
5%
11%
55%
45%
Oct–Dec 2004
43%
29%
12%
3%
13%
52%
48%

2004 election
47.0%
18.5%
17.0%
6.7%
10.8%
55.5%
44.5%
4-5 Feb 2004
50%
18%
15%
5%
12%
59%
41%

Labor's high levels of support was maintained until mid-2005 when support for Labor slumped and the Coalition opened a minor lead on primary votes for the first time since 1996. However, this was eventually wiped out as Labor restored a huge lead in polls in the lead up to the election and the Coalition only managed a 0.5% swing. Even though some mid-term polls suggested a swing of up to 6% against Labor, a swing of over 8% was required for Labor to lose its majority.



Campaign


The campaign started unusually with Premier Peter Beattie denying a general election was about to be called, while residents in some Gold Coast electorates received direct mail from the ALP stating that the election had been called for September.


At a press conference on 16 August, Liberal leader Bruce Flegg stated that in the event that the Coalition won government, and the Liberal Party won more seats than the Nationals, Lawrence Springborg would still become Premier.[4] Other Liberal Party MPs such as Michael Caltabiano disagreed, as this ran contrary to the coalition agreement signed between the two parties, which stated that whichever party won the most seats would form government. The ALP used this to attack Coalition stability in media and advertising.


Flegg was subsequently asked to leave a shopping centre in the Redcliffe suburb of Kippa-Ring for failing to obtain permission to do a campaign walkthrough.[5] Flegg later denied that he had in fact been evicted.


On 22 August, Flegg took part in a media conference with Julie Bishop, federal Liberal Minister for Education, where he endorsed a Federal Government plan for the mandatory teaching of Australian history in schools. Responding to questions from journalists, he failed to identify the date of arrival of the Second Fleet (1790), or the person after whom Brisbane was named (noted astronomer and Governor of New South Wales Sir Thomas Brisbane).[6]


Two sad twists of fate impacted the 26-day campaign - on 30 August, opposition leader Lawrence Springborg took temporary leave from the campaign after the sudden death of his father-in-law, and National Party deputy leader Jeff Seeney and Liberal leader Bruce Flegg continued the campaign in his absence.[7] The death of TV personality Steve Irwin ("The Crocodile Hunter") on 4 September in an accident off Port Douglas, Queensland, took the media's focus away from the election in its final week.[8]


Current Treasurer Anna Bligh has stated the coalition's major election promises of wiping out stamp duty within five years, increasing the first home buyers grant by $3,000 and introducing a 10% per litre subsidy on ethanol-blended petrol will cost $2.4 billion and has blown the budget. Lawrence Springborg says all his election promises are costed and affordable, with costings to be released two days before the election.[9] So far these costings have not been released.


On Friday 8 September, the day before the election, Premier Beattie and Opposition Leader Springborg participated in a "great debate"[10] at the Brisbane Convention & Exhibition Centre, moderated by ABC journalist Chris O'Brien.


Although Newspoll and other published polls showed Labor well ahead on predicted two-party-preferred vote, Labor strategists feared that people would vote for the Coalition in a protest vote, expecting Beattie not to lose.[11] They adopted a strategy of denying Labor was in fact ahead.[12] The Roy Morgan poll suggested the Liberal vote had fallen, while the Greens had risen to 8%.[13]



Seats changing hands


















































































































Seat

Pre-2006

Swing

Post-2006

Party

Member

Margin

Margin

Member

Party

Bundaberg
 
Labor

Nita Cunningham
5.3

-6.3
1.0

Jack Dempsey
National
 

Chatsworth
 
Liberal

Michael Caltabiano
2.5

-3.3
0.8

Chris Bombolas
Labor
 

Clayfield
 
Labor

Liddy Clark
1.2

-2.7
1.5

Tim Nicholls
Liberal
 

Gaven
 
National

Alex Douglas
3.4

-6.5
3.1

Phil Gray
Labor
 

Gympie
 
Independent

Elisa Roberts
10.1

-25.6
15.5

David Gibson
National
 

Kawana
 
Labor

Chris Cummins
1.5

-7.3
5.8

Steve Dickson
Liberal
 

Noosa
 
Independent

Cate Molloy
8.7

-9.7
1.0

Glen Elmes
Liberal
 

Redcliffe
 
Liberal

Terry Rogers
1.3

-6.7
5.4

Lillian van Litsenburg
Labor
 

The margins and swings in Chatsworth, Gaven and Redcliffe are relative to the by-election results.


The margin for Noosa was notionally Labor, but sitting member Cate Molloy became an independent earlier in 2006. The post-election margin is National v. Labor.



See also



  • Candidates of the Queensland state election, 2006

  • Members of the Queensland Legislative Assembly, 2004–2006

  • Members of the Queensland Legislative Assembly, 2006–2009

  • Beattie Ministry



References





  1. ^ Electoral Commission of Queensland (March 2007). Queensland Election 2006: Statistical Returns. p. 6. ISBN 0-7242-6857-X..mw-parser-output cite.citation{font-style:inherit}.mw-parser-output .citation q{quotes:"""""""'""'"}.mw-parser-output .citation .cs1-lock-free a{background:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/6/65/Lock-green.svg/9px-Lock-green.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center}.mw-parser-output .citation .cs1-lock-limited a,.mw-parser-output .citation .cs1-lock-registration a{background:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/d/d6/Lock-gray-alt-2.svg/9px-Lock-gray-alt-2.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center}.mw-parser-output .citation .cs1-lock-subscription a{background:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/a/aa/Lock-red-alt-2.svg/9px-Lock-red-alt-2.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center}.mw-parser-output .cs1-subscription,.mw-parser-output .cs1-registration{color:#555}.mw-parser-output .cs1-subscription span,.mw-parser-output .cs1-registration span{border-bottom:1px dotted;cursor:help}.mw-parser-output .cs1-ws-icon a{background:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/4/4c/Wikisource-logo.svg/12px-Wikisource-logo.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center}.mw-parser-output code.cs1-code{color:inherit;background:inherit;border:inherit;padding:inherit}.mw-parser-output .cs1-hidden-error{display:none;font-size:100%}.mw-parser-output .cs1-visible-error{font-size:100%}.mw-parser-output .cs1-maint{display:none;color:#33aa33;margin-left:0.3em}.mw-parser-output .cs1-subscription,.mw-parser-output .cs1-registration,.mw-parser-output .cs1-format{font-size:95%}.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-left,.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-wl-left{padding-left:0.2em}.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-right,.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-wl-right{padding-right:0.2em}


  2. ^ Electoral Commission of Queensland. "Parliament of Queensland, Assembly election, 9 September 2006". Archived from the original on May 16, 2009. Retrieved 22 March 2009.


  3. ^ Green, Antony. "Totals for the 2006 Election". Queensland Election Archive. Retrieved 7 December 2014.


  4. ^ "2006 Queensland. News: Springborg moves to defuse leadership tensions. Australian Broadcasting Corp". ABC. 2006-08-16. Retrieved 2010-06-09.


  5. ^ "2006 Queensland. News: Flegg denies shopping centre confrontation. Australian Broadcasting Corp". ABC. 2006-08-18. Retrieved 2010-06-09.


  6. ^ [1][dead link]


  7. ^ "Springborg leaves election campaign after father-in-law's death. 30/08/2006. ABC News Online". Abc.net.au. 2006-08-30. Retrieved 2010-06-09.


  8. ^ "Steve Irwin". The Poll Bludger. 2006-09-04. Archived from the original on July 28, 2008. Retrieved 2012-01-27.


  9. ^ "2006 Queensland. News: Parties at odds over Coalition's costings. Australian Broadcasting Corp". ABC. 2006-09-04. Retrieved 2010-06-09.


  10. ^ [2] Archived November 16, 2007, at the Wayback Machine


  11. ^ [3] Archived November 16, 2007, at the Wayback Machine


  12. ^ "Labor 'needs a miracle' to take Liberal seats. 07/09/2006. ABC News Online". Abc.net.au. 2006-09-07. Retrieved 2010-06-09.


  13. ^ "[Roy Morgan Research] Morgan Poll". Roymorgan.com. Archived from the original on June 10, 2011. Retrieved 2010-06-09.




External links



  • Election analysis by Antony Green of the ABC








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