Where time permits I aim to do a preview post for any federal by-election, but in the case of
Groom (Qld, LNP, 20.5%) I'm not expecting to be hanging on the edge of my seat on November 28, and nor am I expecting any flurry of polls. The major purpose in writing this guide is to point to some unusual features of this by-election in terms of its lack of competitiveness. However, it is still an electoral indicator of some kind, and the swing will be watched with some interest in view of events affecting both major parties this week.
Groom History
Groom is mostly (in population terms) the city of Toowoomba, plus surrounding rural areas radiating to the west. Groom is the successor to the Federation division of Darling Downs, the name being changed when the division was redrawn for the 1984 expansion. The seat has had only nine incumbents, all of them male, since Federation (one of whom, Sir Littleton Groom, served two disjunct spells in the seat.)
The seat has invariably been won by conservative MPs, with the slight complication of Sir Littleton Groom serving as an independent briefly in 1929 and 1931-3. He was expelled from the Nationalists after not using his casting vote as Speaker to save them from a no-confidence motion, and lost his seat in 1929, but won it back in 1931 and eventually joined the United Australia Party. The seat has, however, gone back and forth between the Liberal/proto-Liberal side and the Nationals/Country side of the Coalition, with four changes of ownership in cases where it became vacant. Three of these involved three-cornered contests. The last of these came at the Groom by-election 1988, where the seat switched from National hands to Liberal hands after ousted Premier Joh Bjelke-Petersen endorsed the Liberal candidate. In this way, the ghost of Joh hangs over the question of whether the winner should sit in the Liberal or National party rooms.