Galaxy: 57-43 to federal Coalition in Queensland; Seat of the week: Lingiari

GhostWhoVotes tweets that a Galaxy poll on federal voting intention in Queensland gives the Coalition a two-party lead of 57-43 – a seven-point turn-around in Labor’s favour since the last such poll three months ago, suggesting a swing to the Coalition/LNP of only 2% since the 2010 election. Leaving aside the Labor-skewed Morgan face-to-face series, the last time a published poll of federal voting intention showed a swing that low was the Newspoll of May 27-29, 2011, which had the Coalition leading 52-48 nationally. The only Queensland seat Labor would lose on a uniform swing of that size would be Moreton, held by Graham Perrett on a margin of 1.1% (the present numbers in Queensland are 21 seats for the LNP, eight for Labor and one for Bob Katter). The primary votes are 30% for Labor (up seven on the previous poll) and 49% for the Coalition (down seven). The poll also finds 52% detecting little or no impact of the carbon tax on their household budget, against 15% for “major impact” and 27% for “minor impact”. New asylum seeker laws are rated “strong” by 26% of respondents, “inhumane” by 18% and “too little too late” by 51%. The poll was conducted on Wednesday and Thursday from a sample of 800, and has a margin of error of about 3.5%.

UPDATE: The Sunday Mail today has further results from the poll which show “two out of three people believe the Premier is going too far with his proposal to cut 20,000 public sector jobs”, together with figures showing widespared feelings of job insecurity, particularly among government employees.

Further evidence of the Queensland elastic snapping back was provided earlier this week by ReachTEL, which conducted automated phone polls of three seats out of the many which the LNP won from Labor at the state election. These showed Labor leading in two of the seats and lineball in the third. My own calculation of two-party preferred results based on preferences from the previous election had Labor leading 60-40 in Sandgate, a swing to the of 13%, and 51-49 in Brisbane Central, a swing to them of 6%. I had the LNP 51-49 ahead in Towsville, but Possum has it at 51-49 in Labor’s favour – no doubt having used a formula that took better account of the decline of the Katter’s Australian Party vote. The poll also found Campbell Newman’s personal ratings in Sandgate and Townsville in Tony Abbott if not Julia Gillard territory, though he scored better in Brisbane Central. There was similarly a strong view he had not kept his promises in Sandgate and Townville, but an even divide of opinion in Brisbane Central. The samples on each poll were around 400, for margins of error approaching 5%.

And not forgetting …

Seat of the week: Lingiari

I’ve previously been limited my Seat of the Week choices to seats where both parties have preselected candidates, but am making an exception today in a spirit of keeping things topical. The federal seat of Lingiari covers the entirety of the Northern Territory outside of Darwin, which for the most part will play second fiddle during tomorrow night’s election count: whereas Darwin’s suburbs teem with marginal seats, the remainder is largely divided between Country Liberal Party strongholds in Alice Springs and Labor strongholds elsewhere. However, the tea-leaves of the regional and remote results will be read carefully for federal implications given Labor member Warren Snowdon’s narrow margin in Lingiari, and recent rumours of Labor internal polling showing him headed for defeat.

The Northern Territory was first granted its own seat in the federal parliament in 1922, but its member did not attain full voting rights until 1968. Perhaps not coincidentally, the seat had recently fallen to Sam Calder of the Country Party after a long period of Labor control. The Country Liberal Party was established in 1978 as a local alliance between coalition parties to contest elections in the the newly established Northern Territory parliament, and Grant Tambling succeeded Calder as its members upon the latter’s retirement at the 1980 election. Tambling was unseated by Labor’s John Reeves in 1983, and returned as a Senator four years later. The seat thereafter changed hands with some regularity: future Chief Minister Paul Everingham recovered it for the CLP in 1984, Warren Snowdon won it back for Labor in 1987, Nick Dondas held it for the CLP for one term from 1996, and Snowdon recovered it in 1998.

The population of the Northern Territory is such that it consistently hovers between an entitlement of one or two seats according to the formula used to allocate seats to the states and territories. It first rose above the line prior to the 2001 election, resulting in the territory’s division between Solomon, covering Darwin, and Lingiari, which in accommodating the entire remainder of the territory is the second largest electorate in geographical terms after Durack in Western Australia. However, when the Australian Electoral Commission next conducted its mid-term determination of seat entitlements the Northern Territory had fallen 295 residents short of the number required to its second seat. With Labor and the Coalition both convinced they could win both seats at the 2004 election, the parliament proved amenable to arguments that the determination left the territory under-represented, and passed legislation to reinstate the second seat. Solomon and Lingiari accordingly have the lowest enrolments of any seats in Australia at around 62,000, compared with a national average of about 95,000 (which together with the extensive use of mobile booths explains the scarcity of numbers on the 2010 results map at the bottom of the post).

Lingiari is notable for having by far the highest proportion of indigenous persons of any seat in the country, at 41.8% against 15.7% for second-placed Durack. Relatedly, and depressingly, it also has the lowest median age of any electorate. The support of Aboriginal voters has given Labor enough of a base to have kept the seat in their hands, despite CLP strength in pastoral areas and the urban centres of Alice Springs, Katherine and Tennant Creek. Labor’s margins have progressed over four elections from 5.3% to 7.7% to 11.2% to 3.7%. The diversity of the electorate’s components can make for enormously complicated election results, as demonstrated by local swings over the last three elections. In the wake of the Howard government’s intervention into Aboriginal communities before the 2007 election, mobile polling booths swung 8.4% to Warren Snowdon off an already very high base of 78.7%. However, it was a very different story in 2010, when these booths swung to the CLP by no less than 28.1% – a result variously put down to the troubled Strategic Indigenous Housing and Infrastructure Program, the actions of newly merged regional councils, and the ongoing suspension of the Racial Discrimination Act by the new Labor government. Remarkably, the swings in Alice Springs were in the opposite direction, with Snowdon down 2.6% in 2007 and up 8.4% in 2010. In Tennant Creek the Labor vote fell from 58.7% to 34.2% while the Greens rocketed from 4.6% to 33.7%, a result credited to the Muckaty Station nuclear waste dump proposal.

Snowdon is a figure in Labor’s Left faction, and has held junior ministry positions since the Rudd government came to power in 2007. He had earlier been a parliamentary secretary during his first stint as a member from 1990 to 1996, again reaching the position in opposition after the 2001 election. After the 2007 election win he received a substantial promotion to the junior defence science and personnel ministry, which Glenn Milne in The Australian credited to his close association with Julia Gillard. Snowdon was demoted to indigenous health, rural and regional services after Joel Fitzgibbon resigned as Defence Minister in June 2009, which Philip Dorling of the Canberra Times put down to incoming Defence Minister John Faulkner’s “longstanding lack of enthusiasm” for him, “and perhaps more specific concerns about the contribution Mr Snowdon’s office may have made in the past week to Fitzgibbon’s downfall”. He recovered defence science after the 2010 election and further gained veterans affairs, while dropping rural and regional services.

Author: William Bowe

William Bowe is a Perth-based election analyst and occasional teacher of political science. His blog, The Poll Bludger, has existed in one form or another since 2004, and is one of the most heavily trafficked websites on Australian politics.

1,858 comments on “Galaxy: 57-43 to federal Coalition in Queensland; Seat of the week: Lingiari”

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  1. [Shows, nice!
    But no SSD? How do you expect your arguments to instantly launch if there is no SSD??]
    Yeah I would’ve liked a dedicated SSD, or at least a small mSATA SSD cache drive, but I have a small 32 GB USB drive that I am hoping to use as a Windows Readyboost cache:
    http://www.lacie.com/dk/products/product.htm?id=10425
    http://windows.microsoft.com/is-IS/windows7/products/features/readyboost

    Basically I wanted to be able to put my entire music collection on the computer which is currently about 125 GB worth of MP3s. SSDs are great, but they are still very expensive in terms of $ per GB. So I’m happy with a 1 TB hard disc, and hopefully will get a bit of a performance boost using the Readyboost feature and a USB drive that I will leave in the computer all the time.

  2. OzPol Tragic
    [As my MiL, if she survives, will be 196 early next January,]
    YOU GREAT BIG LIAR! AS IF SHE IS 196!

    YOU’RE A LYING LIAR THAT LIES!

  3. Still, they have lost games they should have won and are now finished for the season.

    Rubbish they just have to beat Melbourne by 54 points er ooops well. 😆

  4. Someone was asking if i was out training… Yes. 4km run yesterday, 3km walk today and fire brigade training.

    3km x 4 runs this week before work.

    7km run this coming saturday.

    I had all my fire gear on today looking for painful spots that may come up during the 10km run as its not designed for such tasks. My mates and i have decided i need bike pants underneath the fire pants to stop chafing or 5kg of vasso . I also need to veet my chest hair around my nipples so the bandaids will stick for the 10km to protect from chafing as well.

    Overall my mates think im crazy and have been very helpful in pointing out my future problems much to there delight.

  5. [Rummel,

    You are a credit to your friends, especially the one for whom you are running.]
    Running?

    I thought we were paying him to go away?

  6. [This little black duck
    Posted Sunday, August 26, 2012 at 7:27 pm | Permalink
    rummel,

    What time on Kings Avenue bridge?]

    10.15am to 11.15am depending on if Gillards security team nab me for running past her house.

  7. C@tmomma @ 1662
    [bemused,
    I’ll have you know it’s all your fault that I got so upset this afternoon that I went away and dusted all my nick knacks, polished my mirror, and rearranged the family photos!

    Grey, you don’t escape responsibility for all that either!

    Now everyone, let’s get back to situation normal= nick knacks gathering dust.]
    My guilt is overwhelming 😉

  8. This is quite weird!

    On the one hand, Rupert Murdoch reportedly ordered the Sun to print photos of a naked Prince Harry in defiance of the caution displayed by all UK tabloids following the Murdoch scandals and the Leveson inquiry.

    On the other hand, Murdoch has tweeted that people love Prince Harry and that he should be be “given a break” over the naked incident.

    [It has been reported that Murdoch, 81, ordered newspaper bosses to publish the images because he wanted to fire a warning shot at Lord Justice Leveson, the man leading the inquiry into press standards in the wake of the phone hacking scandal. News has refused to comment on the speculation.

    The Murdoch-owned tabloid argued that printing the images was in the public interest and a “crucial” test of Britain’s free press.]

    http://www.news.com.au/world/give-prince-harry-a-break-says-murdoch/story-fndir2ev-1226458363212

  9. [shellbell
    Posted Sunday, August 26, 2012 at 7:29 pm | Permalink
    Rummel,

    Don’t feel the need to make veeted nipples your next gravatar.]

    Dont laugh! some guys have had blood showing at the end of a 12 night shift.

  10. Tricot @ 1672
    [Bemused

    Describing Donnelly as a Liberal is being kind to him.

    His views on education have been, for years, pages from the Tea Party.

    Why he continues to get any air time at all is a total mystery to me as he has been totally discredited for years.

    The ABC, for some perverse reason, wheels him out from time to time.]
    He is actually a member of the Liberal Party and I have seen him in shots of Vic Liberal Conferences.

  11. [Puff, the Magic Dragon.
    Posted Sunday, August 26, 2012 at 7:30 pm | Permalink
    yes rummel, but will you be live-blogging it? ]

    I might try to carry the ipad on my 7km run next week 🙂

  12. Panthers have found a bit of form – if they roll the Broncos there are quite a few teams that could mathematically snatch 8th spot

    Raiders look relatively safe now but would love to see them sneak into 6th – I wonder if it’s true they stayed in a hotel before this weeks home game to simulate it being an away one??? amazing stuff if it is that worked a treat, hammered the top side

    AFL 8 now locked in, just a question of the order – my prediction Hawks Swans to finish 1 and 2 and play the GF. Question for Blues fans, would you take Fev back??? I really hope he gets a game in the AFL next year – he has been out of favour longer then Frank!!!!

    hoping Nielsen tonight supports the bounce in Newspoll and Morgan

  13. It clearly suggests Mr Abbott did not tell the truth in the affair at the time, and has provoked government fears of a backlash from voters responding angrily to Pauline Hanson’s jailing.

    He never tells the truth about anything.

  14. SO,

    [This sort of behaviour is only appropriate on Speed Dating Fridays.]

    Not as far as we kittehs are concerned, old bean.

  15. womble,

    Bulldogs or Tigers might be a possibility. However, he is 31 and has injury problems atm.

    Collingwood might take a chance if Cloke moves on!

  16. Panthers have found a bit of form – if they roll the Broncos there are quite a few teams that could mathematically snatch 8th spot

    Er no there is one. Only 9 teams can mathematically make the 8.

  17. [Sharman holds a Bachelor of Arts (Honours) in anthropology from Monash University, a Master of Arts in sociology from La Trobe University, a Graduate Diploma in Tertiary Education. She also holds a Doctor of Philosophy (Ph.D.) degree in economics and business from Monash University.]

    Fiona, she probably copped a hard time at Monash during the anti-Vietnam student activist period if she was openly Liberal – Monash was THE trendie-leftie activist Aussie Uni, in an era when most uni students were street-marching proMoritorium antiApartheid activists.

    SS, born 23 April 1951, most probably completely missed the Whitlam fee-free era during her BA, and, if she then enrolled immediately (or within 1-2 yrs) at La Trobe for her MA, probably missed some of the fee-free era for post-grad as well. Unless her PhD is Howard Era, she should have been covered by Hawke-Keating fully-funded Doctoral studies.

    As has happened this year with so many Liberals & their MSM supporters, details of schooling have been removed from Wiki sites. Some bios, inc SS’s, lack family/ background info.

  18. Actually I will correct myself:

    The Tigers need to beat the Storm by 52 + Broncos (if they manage to win) score v Panthers.

    Better chance Abbott being castrated and sent to mars.

  19. Even if Brisbane and West win, Canberra could lose and still come 8th on for and against. West needs everything to go its way.

  20. I have just been reacquainting myself with the story of Tony Abboott’s “Let’s Lock Up Pauline Hanson” Slush Fund.

    I particularly like this bit and I draw attention to it on the off chance Tony Abbott, Christopher Pyne, George Brandis or Erica Betz are lurking:

    [CRAIG EMERSON, OPPOSITION INDUSTRIAL RELATIONS SPOKESMAN: Tony Abbott needs to answer these questions.

    Where did the money come from?

    Who received the money?]

    You see, THAT’S how you do it. If you are going to suggest questions need to be asked, at least go to the trouble of applying a bit of grey matter to it and work out what those questions are.

    Incidentally, Tony (if you are lurking), I have a question for you:

    How’s your week been? :devil:

  21. [As has happened this year with so many Liberals & their MSM supporters, details of schooling have been removed from Wiki sites. Some bios, inc SS’s, lack family/ background info.]
    ???

    What about the parliamentary bios on aph.gov.au?

  22. [Stephen Koukoulas @TheKouk 1h
    The next 2 weeks are biggies for the economic data & events – domestic m& globally. In 2 weeks we’ll know just how strong or weak things are]

  23. Rua the Raiders are playing well. I almost backed them Friday night. I’m 1 out of two for the week:

    Cows – WIN

    Tigers – LOSE

    Slightly in the red.

    Storm are no good things v Sharks 😐

  24. Spot the error:

    Tony Tea ‏@AfterGrogBlog
    Tony Shaw: “Melbourne has had 13 Number One draft picks in the last 6 years.”

  25. Tony Shaw: “Melbourne has had 13 Number One draft picks in the last 6 years.

    And they’re still shyte

    GG, they get 13 due to priority picks.

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