Queensland election night live

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9:18 – Okay so if we look at the 23 Labor seats held on margins of 10% or less, the LNP has gained six, they are likely in three more, are ahead on early counting in Hervey Bay, and are narrowly ahead in Rockhampton. That currently puts them on eleven gains, plus they are leading in Mirani. Subtract their loss in Ipswich West, and that puts them in the lead in 46 seats.

Labor has retained five seats in that 0-10% range, and are narrowly ahead in six others. Their lead is slightly bigger in Cook (which the ABC has called).

Labor has retained all but two seats above 10%. The only exceptions are Maryborough (Labor narrowly ahead) and Mulgrave (LNP ahead of Labor but KAP also in with a chance).

So if you add in Mulgrave to the LNP’s leads, they are currently leading in 47.

9:06 – I haven’t really paid attention to Mirani, where Stephen Andrew is the sitting MP. He’s running for Katter’s Australian Party after losing One Nation preselection. His former party is preferencing the LNP, and they are narrowly in front. If the LNP won here, that would get them one seat closer to that majority. Combine that with a Labor gain in South Brisbane and that would mean a crossbench shrinking from seven to five.

9:03 – So thinking about pre-poll and postal votes. The election predictions rely on matched swing – basically it takes into account pre-existing differences between election day and early votes, but assumes that the swing will be similar. If pre-poll vote is more favourable to the LNP, but the change is similar to election day, then the current numbers will be roughly right. But if the pre-poll swing is bigger than the election day swing, then we’ll probably see a few seats where Labor is leading flip to the LNP.

This is sort of what happened in NSW – the swing to Labor was smaller on pre-poll, and the prospects of a Labor majority faded.

8:52 – So how far up the pendulum is this race close? Looking at seats Labor holds by 12% or more, there are just two where the race is close. One is Mulgrave (12.2%) and the other is Logan (13.4%). They are leading in both but they are close – Mulgrave has already been explained, and Labor has a 1.8% lead in Logan.

Amongst the 12 Labor seats on margins of 7-12%, Labor is leading in every seat. I did a quick check of all these, the ABC website has only called Maryborough. I think they are well ahead in Cooper, Ferny Grove, Murrumba and Bulimba. They’re leading by a decent lead but not quite as big in five others. Only in two of these seats is it very close – Capalaba and Rockhampton.

Things are much messier in the seats under a 7% margin, but Labor is still leading in many seats. Labor is leading in 10 of these 18 seats, the LNP is leading in eight.

So on those numbers, right now Labor has regained Ipswich West and South Brisbane, and is trailing in eight others. That would be a net loss of six, which would leave them on 45 seats. There are 11 others where the ALP lead is quite narrow. If they lost all of those seats, that would give the LNP a majority.

8:25 – It’s worth pausing on Mulgrave. This Cairns-area seat has been held by Curtis Pitt since 2009, but he’s retiring. The preference count has Labor narrowly ahead of the LNP, but Labor is leading with the primary vote of just over 25%.

Katter’s Australian Party are third on 16.1%, and over 38% of the vote is with the other candidates: just over 8% each with Legalise Cannabis and independent David Raymond, One Nation on 7%, another independent on 6.5%, and Greens on 4.3%. KAP is just 4% behind the LNP and they would have a good shot of winning if they can get into the top two.

8:09 – A bit of a summary of the state of play after 8pm:

  • Labor is definitely losing seats, but the number of lost seats is small, and all in the north of the state. In the marginal seats, the margins remain very slim and Labor is leading in many of them.
  • At the moment it’s hard to see Labor retaining their slim majority but the LNP isn’t quite getting enough of a swing for a majority.
  • The result has not been particularly impressive for the crossbench. KAP hasn’t been competitive in Townsville or Cairns seats, the Greens are not gaining any seats and are in serious danger of losing South Brisbane, and Margaret Strelow is in a distant third place in Rockhampton.

7:57 – The LNP also has a very narrow lead in Rockhampton, where independent Margaret Strelow is clearly in third.

7:56 – Looking at a list of the most marginal Labor seats (those under 6%), the LNP only has a substantial lead in Keppel, Thuringowa and Mundingburra. They have slim leads in Caloundra, Barron River and Townsville, but those are bouncing around.

In case you don’t know Queensland geography, three of those six seats are in Townsville, one is in Cairns, one is a large regional seat north of Rockhampton, and just one is in the south-east – Caloundra, my current location.

7:48 – Earlier on I was talking about the LNP needing to gain 12 seats to win a majority (13 if they don’t retain Ipswich West, which they have not). But it seems more relevant to point out that Labor needs to lose 5 seats to lose their majority. Right now the ABC has called a Labor gain in Ipswich West, and losses in Keppel, Mackay and Townsville, which would put them on 49. I think it’s likely they’ll lose their majority but not at all certain.

7:45 – As Antony is saying now on TV, there is a clear regional divide – smaller swings away from Labor in Brisbane (the inner city in particular) than in regional Queensland.

7:38 – The easiest path for the Greens to win seats is for Labor to drop into third place, and then win on Labor preferences. The LNP is preferencing Labor, so the Greens would need a decent primary vote lead to win if Labor is in second.

When it looked like Labor would be beaten badly, it seemed like the Greens could win a number of inner-city seats by coming second and winning on Labor preferences. But right now the Labor vote is holding up quite well there. The Greens have a chance of coming second in Cooper, but LNP preferences would then re-elect Labor. And in South Brisbane, where the LNP reversed their 2020 preferences to instead preference Labor, Greens MP Amy Macmahon could be in trouble.

7:33 – Right now there are a lot of marginals that are very close and not many that are clearly flipping to the LNP. Looking at the 15 most marginal Labor seats (those held by 6.3% or less), Labor has a big lead in one (Thuringowa), they are narrowly in front in 7, the LNP. has a big lead in Mundingburra and Keppel, very slim leads in Nicklin and Barron River, and slightly bigger leads in Townsville and Cook. We also have no data from Hervey Bay.

A small boost in the LNP position could see them win a clear majority from those seats, but on current figures it would be enough to just push Labor into minority but not get the LNP close to a majority.

7:26 – Aspley is Labor’s tenth-most marginal seat. Remember the LNP needs to win twelve seats to win a majority. Right now Labor is slightly ahead with some real preferences in.

7:22 – Another odd seat is Thuringowa, where the ABC’s preference projection has Labor up 4.3%. But this seems quite messy, with Labor’s primary vote down, the LNP primary up, and both KAP and One Nation down. An independent, seemingly a left-leaning one, is on almost 5%.

In the other two Townsville-area seats, Townsville and Mundingburra, Labor’s modest margins look set to fall.

7:18 – The LNP has a big lead in Barron River, but things are much less positive for them in neighbouring Cairns and Mulgrave. The projected swing in Cairns is 3.6%, which would leave the LNP 1.9% short. And there’s basically no swing in Mulgrave – admittedly a seat with a bigger margin, but held by a prominent MP who has held the seat for 15 years.

7:14 – The expected swing to the LNP is also quite modest in Caloundra, Labor’s fourth-most marginal seats. Jason Hunt is also a first-term MP.

7:13 – The ABC has already called Bundaberg (Labor’s most marginal seat) as a Labor retain, and now it looks like they are leading in Nicklin, their second-most marginal seat. Both had first-term Labor MPs.

7:10 – There are a range of swings, and it seems likely the LNP is on track to win, but it’s not enormous. Looking at Stephen Miles’ seat of Murrumba, it looks like there’s no swing at all after preferences (based on ABC preference estimates).

7:02 – The ABC has the ALP in front in South Brisbane on one tiny booth because they are coming second and now benefit from LNP preferences. I wouldn’t rely on that for anything. Interestingly we have more data from Maiwar and Labor is up. If they overtook the LNP that could get interesting but still quite early.

The Greens are in third in Miller, just behind the LNP, but they’d need to do a lot better to win. Numbers are very small in Cooper, and non-existed in McConnel and Greenslopes.

6:56 – The Labor swing in Bundaberg has calmed down a bit but Labor is still winning there. I haven’t seen any other seats bucking the trend – generally there are respectable swings to the LNP all over the place.

6:54 – A bit more data in Thuringowa also has KAP in a respectable third there.

6:48 – Tiny samples in the three Townsville-area seats of Townsville, Thuringowa and Mundingburra. KAP is in third in Townsville and Mundingburra, and practically no votes in Thuringowa.

6:43 – One thing worth watching tonight is whether first-term MPs gain a “sophomore surge”. An example worth watching is Labor’s most marginal seat, Bundaberg, where first-term Labor MP Tom Smith has a 10% primary vote swing on a small vote sample.

6:36 – There are numbers now but they are very small so I’ll wait before posting analysis.

6:11 – The Courier Mail has an exit poll which is reporting Labor and LNP with even primary votes in 10 seats, which is being reported as showing the race as close, but:

  • The seats selected have an average Labor margin of 7.6%.
  • The poll is ony conducted on election day, where Labor generally does better than at pre-poll.
  • These figures are primary votes. While the ALP probably doesn’t do quite as well in preferences in Queensland as they do in some states, it still confuses things.

So if they are neck and neck on primary votes on election day in these marginal seats, they are probably losing as expected.

6:00 – Polls have just closed in Queensland for the 2024 state election. I will be covering the election tonight here at the Tally Room, at least as long as the website can handle the traffic. If the website collapses, I will move over to Tally Room in Exile.

Throughout the campaign, and frankly the whole year, the expectation has been that the LNP would win a large majority, but in the last few weeks there have been a number of polls showing a much closer race, although the LNP remains in the lead.

Follow along with me tonight – I expect we’ll get results from around 6:30.

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198 COMMENTS

  1. Noosa: independent retain, 61.1% TCP vs LNP, +4.7% to LNP.

    Scenic Rim: LNP retain, Springwood: Labor retain, Toowoomba North: LNP retain.

  2. @John yeah with the hat. And now I don’t have to.

    I also think the ABC computer is broken. Labor isn’t retaining Bundaberg.

  3. The ABC computer could be broken as NP suggested. The Greens suffered a swing in Maiwar but wouldn’t the surge in Labor votes help them?

  4. The Greens are first in Maiwar, the LNP are second and Labor are third in Maiwar. As much as I’d love the LNP to get a BCC-like result and win I don’t see it happening.

    Antony Green just said the computer’s giving seats away that shouldn’t have been.

  5. Ignore Bundaberg and Maiwar everyone.

    Sandgate however looks really interesting. 12.5% counted and the LNP still have 55.4% TPP.

  6. Cook is interesting.

    Lui is recording swings on the Cape.
    Coen – 44% in 2020 to 49% now; LNP going from 24% to 17%
    Cooktown – 28% in 2020 to 36% now; LNP going from 21% to 24%
    Julatten (not the cape) – 20% in 2020 to 30% now, leading on primaries!
    Pormpuraaw – 65% to 72%
    Holding steady in Weipa North

    On these limited numbers I’ll be trending towards a Labor retain here

  7. BREAKING: LNP GAINS BARRON RIVER AND MUNDINGBURRA

    The LNP have gained Barron River with 58.0% TPP (+11.1%). Mundingburra has also been gained with 56.5% TPP (+10.4%).

    The ABC computer has listened to me and has put Bundaberg and Maiwar back in doubt.

  8. @James that’s not surprising he’s well-liked.

    @Real Talk the turnout will be interesting given that Aboriginal turnout was really low in the Territory. Some say it was from voter fatigue and apathy, others say it was from the Voice, others say they got a big enrolment campaign going but not an actual voting campaign in those remote communities.

    Pormpuraaw had a massive swing to Warren Entsch (LNP) in 2022, it was over 30% which is bloody gigantic.

  9. Only one booth officially entered on the ECQ website for Barron River 2PP. I trust Antony Green’s wisdom over my own though.

  10. @Scart maybe, I’m not sure, I did just see that though. No idea what’s going on with the swings. Sandgate is looking good for the LNP as I said before.

    Gladstone has been called as a Labor retain but as expected a big swing against Labor on TPP (–14.3%). Glenn Butcher has 59.2% TPP at the moment there.

  11. @NP Turnout does appear to be down, at least in Pormpuraaw – 229 votes cast in 2024 compared with 290 last time. Lockhart River also down from 163 to 146.

  12. NP, are you sure about Barron river? ABC says too early with a 3.1% swing, no where near the 11.0% you are announced. Where do you get your figures from?

  13. St Lucia booth in Maiwar has a 16% primary vote swing TOWARDS Labor. Across Maiwar, lots of 7-10% primary vote swings towards Labor. LNP down a bit, and greens down about 6%.

  14. The Greens are in trouble in South Brisbane. It might be due to the LNP switching preferences from Greens to Labor.

  15. Kevin Bonham flagging Greens might be in trouble in South Brisbane. Didn’t see this coming at all – if it’s not just early booth woes then at least the Greens can take comfort in the idea that Labor can effectively challenge them by moving to the left.

  16. Everton (the electorate not the Everton Football Club from Liverpool) has been called for the LNP.

    Some of my friends are Liverpool fans so if Labor’s vote drops 20% they’ll be saying that Everton has been deducted yet another 20 points. Look it up if you’re unfamiliar with soccer.

  17. Ipswich West has been called as a Labor gain. Labor has 55.1% TPP, but the LNP have a swing of +9.3% since 2020.

  18. Given that probly half of people prepolled which will favour lnp some seats may be too close to calll tonight for labor

  19. Pretty bad night for Greens so far and this is on the day votes where they’re expected to do better than in prepolls.

    South Brisbane has a decent primary but seems like QLD Greens haven’t done the same work Adam Bandt does to stem the flow against them from LNP votes when there’s an unfavourable HTV.

    Decent primary vote swings to Greens in the seats covering Moreton so far but not enough to challenge the seat

  20. +9.2% swing to the LNP in Maryborough. However Labor’s Bruce Saunders still has 52.7% TPP and the ABC says he’s been re-elected.

  21. Labor was always gonna regain ipswich west there was no way they were gonna hold that by election vote and I did predict they’d regain south Brisbane too given they only lost it because the lnp preferences the greens.

  22. James Ashby is at Mario’s Sizzling Parilla in Rosslyn Bay in the seat of Keppel. He is doing well in Keppel. He is still refusing to concede.

  23. @Real Talk you mean Daniel T? I’ll let Ben comment on him, he hasn’t been commenting lately for a reason but that’s between him and Ben. It’s not my business though, so I won’t comment on that.

  24. The Greens vote is down where it Matters, in Maiwar, South Brisbane and Cooper (not enough Mcconnel figures). 7% primary election day swing to Greens to Labor in Maiwar, as high as 16% in some booths around UQ (presumably due to 50c fares being REALLY popular among students). The Greens need to get on top of this or they won’t hold Ryan or Brisbane.

    I voted Greens in Maiwar today, so I’m not being a partisan criticising them for no reason.

  25. BREAKING: MACKAY LNP GAIN, HISTORIC GAIN

    For the first time in history, Mackay has been won by the LNP. 55.0% TPP for Nigel Dalton. +11.7% swing.

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