Seat estimate for these primaries unchanged from election (14-10-5-3-3-0)
Better Premier Rockliff leads Winter 40-32 (lead up 5) but new leaders usually underperform on this score
ELECTORAL, POLLING AND POLITICAL ANALYSIS, COMMENT AND NEWS FROM THE PEOPLE'S REPUBLIC OF CLARK. LET 2026 BE THE YEAR VICTORIA IS FINALLY FREED OF THE CURSE OF GROUP TICKET VOTING. IF USING THIS SITE ON MOBILE YOU CAN SCROLL DOWN AND CLICK "VIEW WEB VERSION" TO SEE THE SIDEBAR FULL OF GOODIES.
UPDATE: Following this article - and I have been told this article had some influence - the House on 14 May suspended Standing Orders 358 and 359 for the current Session, replacing them with this:
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One thing that I have noticed in Tasmania's parliamentary debates that I find strange is that suspending standing orders without notice requires a two-thirds majority. In the Standing and Sessional Orders from the previous term this appears as item 358:
"358 Standing Orders not suspended without Notice.
In cases of urgent necessity any Standing Order or Orders of the House, except Standing Order No. 94, may be suspended on a Motion duly made without Notice, provided that such Motion has the concurrence of a two-thirds majority of the Members present.
359 Motion for suspension carried by majority.
When a Motion for the suspension of any Standing Order or Orders appears on the Notice Paper, such Motion may be carried by a majority of the Members present."
(Standing Order 94, for anyone wondering, is the procedure for rescinding previous votes, which requires three days notice and, if the decision is less than a year old, support of an absolute majority).
Live comments (scrolls to top)
All numbers posted here are unofficial. Check the TEC site for current figures. Comments will appear here once counting starts - refresh every 10 mins or so for updates. Note that Green in Prosser is Bryan Green the Labor candidate not the Greens.
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Final Wrapup And The Road Ahead
It's all over bar a trivial number of votes to be added in the next week and these are the party standings in the new Legislative Council with the seat changes compared to the start of the year:
...and when the tide goes out in Queensland, they say that it goes out a long way ...
Yesterday's YouGov poll finding the Miles government trailing 44-56 led to a minor outbreak of poll denialism on social media (I've so far seen versions of A4, C4, C6, C8 and C9), but Steven Miles himself was not denying the polling at all, commendably admitting that it looked "most likely" that his government would lose in October. (Just whatever you do, Premier, don't actually concede before election day!) I haven't covered Queensland polling since I gave the Courier Mail a big roasting for some really bad poll reporting in December 2022 and a return to Queensland polls is overdue. It happens this time that the poll is so bad for Labor that even the Courier Mail can't spin it as much worse than it is.
It's worth noting that Queensland Labor during its nine years in power has often polled indifferently. In the 2015-7 term it trailed on 2PP in a third of the published polls, but never worse than 48-52. In the 2017-20 term there was less polling and there had been a few shabby looking numbers (again no worse than 48-52) before the COVID-19 pandemic arrived in 2020 and lifted all governing boats. The Palaszczuk government ended up slightly outperforming its final polling, but it was a very sparsely polled election. Going into the 2024 contest that is now just six months away, it looks like we might see a higher volume.
During last night's Cook by-election count there were a few comments about the swing column. All six parties/independents had recorded a positive swing from the 2022 election. In the case of Cook this was not at all surprising - three of the parties and the one independent had not even run in the seat in 2022, so their "swing" was automatically plus. The Greens were always going to get a primary vote swing with no Labor candidate and no prominent left/centre independent. That left the Liberals, and the question was whether they could gain enough primaries from the 34.6% who voted Labor, UAP or One Nation in 2022 to compensate for replacing a former Prime Minister and 17-year incumbent with some dude from outside the electorate. This they did with 7% to spare and lo and behold there's a neat little line of pluses in the swing column for the recontesting candidates:
This is a common event in by-elections where one major party doesn't contest. It has happened by my count in 9 of 21 such by-elections in the last 50 years, the others being Perth and Batman 2018, Higgins 2009, Isaacs 2000, Holt 1999, Blaxland 1996, Wentworth 1995, and Menzies 1991. Perth 2018 achieved this feat despite having 15 candidates, however only three parties were recontesting. Blaxland 1996 had five recontestants - I should note that I treat an independent as such only if it is the same person running and doing so as an independent both times.
This is my guide for the May 4th election for the Legislative Council seat of Hobart. On Wednesday I released a brief survey of the Council's voting patterns. Links to other seats: Hobart Prosser . There will be live coverage on the night of May 4th.
At the start of this year the Legislative Council consisted of four Labor, four Liberal and seven independents, with three of the independents strongly left-leaning, one centrist, and three somewhat right-leaning albeit still left of the Liberal Party. Council voting has also seen a rapid increase in "Laborial" bipartisan voting patterns where the major parties combine against some or all of the indies. The 2024 Legislative Council elections follow hot on the heels of an extremely messy lower house election, and for the first time since 1909 three seats fall vacant on the same day. The three vacancies are one Labor, one Liberal and a left independent, so the elections are very important for both the left-right balance of the Council and the independent-major party balance.
The election for Elwick is a by-election. The winner will hold the seat for four years rather than the usual six, and will be up for their first defence in 2028.