词条 | 1989 Merthyr state by-election |
释义 |
The Merthyr state by-election, 1989 was a by-election held on 13 May 1989 for the Queensland Legislative Assembly seat of Merthyr, based in the inner Brisbane suburb of New Farm. The by-election was triggered by the resignation of National MP and former minister Don Lane on 20 January 1989. Lane, who had been a member of the Liberal Party until shortly after the 1983 election, had admitted that he had misappropriated funds during his time as a minister in Sir Joh Bjelke-Petersen's government, which was being investigated by the Fitzgerald Inquiry. Furthermore, he implicated 14 other serving or former ministers in these activities. The media, led by The Courier-Mail newspaper, questioned the morality of a confessed dishonest politician continuing a Parliamentary career at the expense of taxpayers. Upon his resignation, despite the Labor Party's opposition to any further entitlements, he collected a superannuation payout of A$535,000 and awaited charges from the inquiry's special prosecutor, Doug Drummond QC.[1] The by-election campaign was quite unusual, with a total of 10 candidates nominating. A local car salesperson, Betty Byrne-Henderson, won National Party preselection and campaigned on the slogan "Send a Message to Canberra". However, most of the campaign's attention was on Queensland issues—in particular the daily revelations from the Fitzgerald Inquiry. CandidatesThe candidates were:[1]
Results{{Election box begin ||title=Merthyr state by-election, 1989[6] }}{{Election box candidate AU party| |party = Liberal QLD |candidate = Santo Santoro |votes = 6,170 |percentage = 35.91 |change = +3.82 }}{{Election box candidate AU party| |party = Labor QLD |candidate = Barbara Dawson |votes = 5,623 |percentage = 32.73 |change = +0.23 }}{{Election box candidate AU party| |party = Nationals QLD |candidate = Betty Byrne-Henderson |votes = 2,753 |percentage = 16.02 |change = –16.74 }}{{Election box candidate AU party| |party = Independent |candidate = Nigel Powell |votes = 1,281 |percentage = 7.46 |change = +7.46 }}{{Election box candidate AU party| |party = Independent |candidate = Tanya Wilde |votes = 540 |percentage = 3.14 |change = +3.14 }}{{Election box candidate AU party| |party = Democrats |candidate = John Brown |votes = 443 |percentage = 2.58 |change = +0.82 }}{{Election box candidate AU party| |party = Independent |candidate = Gerry Bellino |votes = 334 |percentage = 1.94 |change = +1.94 }}{{Election box candidate AU party| |party = Independent |candidate = Isabella Ciadamidaro |votes = 36 |percentage = 0.21 |change = +0.21 }}{{Election box formal |votes = 17,180 |percentage = 95.29 |change = –1.60 }}{{Election box informal |votes = 848 |percentage = 4.71 |change = +1.60 }}{{Election box turnout |votes = 18,028 |percentage = 78.92 |change = −10.35 }}{{Election box 2pp}}{{Election box candidate AU party| |party = Liberal QLD |candidate = Santo Santoro |votes = 9,784 |percentage = 56.95 |change = N/A }}{{Election box candidate AU party| |party = Labor QLD |candidate = Barbara Dawson |votes = 7,396 |percentage = 43.05 |change = N/A }}{{Election box gain AU party |winner = Liberal QLD |loser = Nationals QLD |swing = N/A }}{{Election box end}} AftermathThe result was the first real indication of very serious problems for the National Party ahead of the 1989 election—with the collapse in their vote, the Liberals managed to win the seat against Labor on preferences. However, as a cross-bench party in the position of attacking an unpopular government while trying to avoid voters switching to the Labor opposition, and in some key seats dependent upon preference flows from National voters, some analysts suggested that if the government's support was to collapse completely in South East Queensland, Labor rather than the Liberals could become the key beneficiaries of the changing political tide.[1] Mike Ahern, whose leadership of the Nationals was being questioned by conservatives within his party, survived as Premier of Queensland for another four months before being replaced by Russell Cooper. In December 1989, Labor under Wayne Goss won the election with 54 of the Assembly's 89 seats. Santo Santoro served as the member for Merthyr and its successor seat, Clayfield, for 12 years until losing it at the 2001 election. He later served as a Federal Senator and a minister in the Howard Government. See also
References1. ^1 2 {{cite journal |date=December 1989 |title= Australian Political Chronicle: January–June 1989 |journal= Australian Journal of Politics and History |volume= 35 |issue= 3 |pages= 453–454 |issn=0004-9522 |doi=10.1111/j.1467-8497.1989.tb01305.x}} {{Qld by-elections 45th parl}}2. ^{{cite news|url=http://www.news.com.au/couriermail/story/0,23739,22458468-3102,00.html|title=Candidate link to crime boss|work=The Courier-Mail|last=Wardell|first=Steven|date=22 September 2007|accessdate=11 April 2009}} 3. ^{{cite news|title=Tania to make a stand in Merthyr|work=Sydney Morning Herald|date=15 March 1989|last=Roberts|first=Greg}} 4. ^{{cite news|title=Ex-policeman to stand|work=Sydney Morning Herald|date=13 March 1989}} 5. ^{{cite web|title=Merthyr (By-election) - Election Archive - ABC News|url=http://www.abc.net.au/elections/archive/qld/results/1986/Merthyr_1989By.htm|last=Green|first=Antony|access-date=June 20, 2017}} 6. ^{{cite book|title=Details of polling at general election held on 2 December 1989|author=Queensland Legislative Assembly|date=6 March 1990|page=69}} 3 : 1989 elections in Australia|Queensland state by-elections|20th century in Queensland |
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