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This is a list of electoral results for the Division of Brisbane in Australian federal ... 2016 Australian federal election: Brisbane [3] Party Candidate Votes ...
2024 Queensland state election: South Brisbane [82] Party Candidate Votes % ±% Greens: Amy MacMahon: 12,146 34.7 −3.2 Labor: Barbara O'Shea: 11,192 32.0 −2.4 Liberal National: Marita Parkinson 10,472 29.9 +7.1 One Nation: Richard Henderson 1,179 3.4 +1.6 Total formal votes 34,989 97.6 Informal votes 874 2.4 Turnout: 35,863 Two-candidate ...
Toggle Brisbane subsection. 3.1 Bracken Ridge. ... This is a list of local government area results for the 2024 ... Won by NQ State Alliance at a 2021 by-election ...
Brisbane City Council elections are significant in the scope of Australian local government politics, as the council is the largest in the country by population, area and has the largest economy of any local government area (LGA). [1] [2] [3] The Liberal National Party has held Brisbane's mayoralty since the election of Campbell Newman at the ...
The Governor may call an election earlier than scheduled if the Government does not maintain confidence, or the annual appropriation bill fails to pass. Issue of election writ – Tuesday 1 October 2024, by the Governor of Queensland. Candidate nominations period – Wednesday 2 October to Tuesday 8 October 2024 at 12pm, local time.
The LNP still holds every Queensland seat outside Brisbane except Kennedy, which is held by Bob Katter, the founder of the conservative Katter's Australian Party (KAP). One Nation's vote, although decreased since the last election, was slightly higher than it was at the 2020 Queensland state election, at 7.49%.
2024 Queensland mayoral elections: Gold Coast [11] [12] Party Candidate Votes % ±% Independent LNP: Tom Tate: 170,150 51.82 −3.91 Independent: Eddy Sarroff 68,061 20.73 Independent: Danielle Dunsmore 25,983 7.91 Animal Justice: Jennifer Horsburgh 18,130 5.52 Independent: Rosie Foster 14,642 4.46 Independent: Lavinia Rampino 9,137 2.78 ...
The city of Brisbane, the division's namesake (pictured August 2012) The division was proclaimed in 1900, and was one of the original 65 divisions to be contested at the first federal election. It is named after the city of Brisbane. It was in Labor hands for all but five years from 1931 to 2010, and for most of that time was a marginal Labor seat.