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词条 2005 Redcliffe state by-election
释义

  1. Background

  2. Candidates

  3. Results

  4. Aftermath

  5. See also

  6. References

A by-election was held for the Legislative Assembly of Queensland district of Redcliffe on 20 August 2005. It was triggered by the resignation of sitting Labor member and Speaker Ray Hollis.

The by-election was held to coincide with the Chatsworth by-election on the same day. Both contests resulted in the Labor Party losing the seat to the rival Liberal Party. Terry Rogers was elected as the new member for Redcliffe.

Background

Ray Hollis first entered parliament at the 1989 state election and held the seat of Redcliffe at every election thereafter. When Labor came to power at the 1998 state election, Hollis was appointed Speaker of the Legislative Assembly of Queensland.

On 21 July 2005, Hollis announced his retirement from politics, citing ill health.[1] This followed political controversy over whether Hollis's claimed travel expenses had been authorised, although the Crime and Misconduct Commission did not consider the matter suspicious.[2]

Candidates

At the 2004 state election, Ray Hollis's two party preferred vote was slashed to 57.1%, down from 67.6% at the previous election. The Liberal candidate who achieved that swing of 10.5% was Terry Rogers. Rogers was chosen unopposed as the Liberal candidate for the Redcliffe by-election.[3]

The Labor Party chose school teacher Lillian van Litsenburg to defend Redcliffe, a seat they'd held for the past 19 years.[3]

Also standing at the by-election was independent candidate Rob McJannett who, as the only non-major party candidate to run for Redcliffe, achieved a hefty 14.3% of the primary vote at the 2004 state election.

Results

{{Election box begin |
|title=Redcliffe state by-election, 2005[4][5]
}}{{Election box candidate AU party
| candidate = Terry Rogers
| party = Liberal QLD
| votes = 9,425
| percentage = 41.17
| change = +5.54
}}{{Election box candidate AU party
| candidate = Lillian van Litsenburg
| party = Labor QLD
| votes = 9,076
| percentage = 39.65
| change = −10.43
}}{{Election box candidate AU party
| candidate = Pete Johnson
| party = Greens QLD
| votes = 1,467
| percentage = 6.41
| change = +6.41
}}{{Election box candidate AU party
| candidate = Terry Shaw
| party =
| votes = 1,171
| percentage = 5.12
| change = +5.12
}}{{Election box candidate AU party
| candidate = Rob McJannett
| party =
| votes = 869
| percentage = 3.80
| change = −10.49
}}{{Election box candidate AU party
| candidate = Susan Meredith
| party = One Nation
| votes = 762
| percentage = 3.33
| change = +3.33
}}{{Election box candidate AU party
| candidate = Rod McDonough
| party =
| votes = 121
| percentage = 0.53
| change = +0.53
}}{{Election box formal
| votes = 22,891
| percentage = 97.65
| change = −0.01
}}{{Election box informal
| votes = 550
| percentage = 2.35
| change = +0.01
}}{{Election box turnout
| votes = 23,441
| percentage = 87.78
| change = −4.93
}}{{Election box 2pp}}{{Election box candidate AU party
| candidate = Terry Rogers
| party = Liberal QLD
| votes = 10,466
| percentage = 51.25
| change = +8.35
}}{{Election box candidate AU party
| candidate = Lillian van Litsenburg
| party = Labor QLD
| votes = 9,955
| percentage = 48.75
| change = −8.35
}}{{Election box gain AU party|
|winner = Liberal QLD
|loser = Labor QLD
|swing = +8.35
}}{{Election box end}}

Aftermath

The by-election win of Terry Rogers, along with that of Michael Caltabiano in Chatsworth, was a filip for the Liberal Party, who increased their numbers in the Legislative Assembly from five to seven. However, the Liberal Party's hold on these two seats did not last long; both returned to the Labor fold at the 2006 state election.

Labor's unsuccessful candidate for the Redcliffe by-election, Lillian van Litsenburg, was again the Labor candidate for the seat at the 2006 state election when she was elected the member for Redcliffe.

See also

  • Redcliffe state by-election, 2014
  • List of Queensland state by-elections

References

1. ^{{cite news | title=Qld Speaker Hollis quits | date=21 July 2005 | publisher=ABC | url=http://www.abc.net.au/news/stories/2005/07/21/1419345.htm}}
2. ^{{cite news | title=Speaker Background | publisher=Stateline Queensland | date=6 May 2005 | url=http://www.abc.net.au/stateline/qld/content/2005/s1361996.htm}}
3. ^{{cite news | title=By-election campaign kicks off | publisher=ABC | date=20 July 2005 | url=http://www.abc.net.au/news/stories/2005/07/30/1426189.htm}}
4. ^ {{cite web |title = 2005 Redcliffe by-election |publisher = Electoral Commission of Queensland |url = http://www.ecq.qld.gov.au/elections/2005/district68.html |deadurl = yes |archiveurl = https://web.archive.org/web/20110617025854/http://www.ecq.qld.gov.au/elections/2005/district68.html |archivedate = 2011-06-17 |df = }}
5. ^ {{cite web |title = 2004 general election: Redcliffe |publisher = Electoral Commission of Queensland |url = http://www.ecq.qld.gov.au/elections/state/state2004/results/district68.html |deadurl = yes |archiveurl = https://web.archive.org/web/20120222035956/http://www.ecq.qld.gov.au/elections/state/state2004/results/district68.html |archivedate = 2012-02-22 |df = }}
{{Qld by-elections 51st parl}}

3 : 2005 elections in Australia|Queensland state by-elections|21st century in Queensland

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