Wynnum Manly – Brisbane 2024

Council margin – ALP 11.4%
Mayoral margin – ALP 1.4%

Incumbent councillor
Sara Whitmee, since 2023. Whitmee was appointed to replace Peter Cumming as councillor for Wynnum Manly in May 2023.

Geography
Eastern Brisbane. Wynnum Manly covers along the eastern coastline of Brisbane on the south side of the river, including Manly, Wynnum, Lota and Lytton.

History
Labor’s Peter Cumming won Wynnum Manly in 1994. He has been re-elected six times.

His margin was cut to 5.8% in 2004, when the LNP won the lord mayoralty, but managed to increase his margin to 9.1% in 2008.

In 2012, Cumming’s 9.1% margin was cut to 1.2%, but he recovered to an 11.6% margin in 2016 and kept that stable at 11.4% in 2020.

Candidates

Assessment
Wynnum Manly should stay in Labor hands.

2020 council result

Candidate Party Votes % Swing
Peter Cumming Labor 12,436 53.9 -1.9
Megan Piccardi Liberal National 8,292 35.9 +0.1
Ken Austin Greens 2,355 10.2 +1.9
Informal 537 2.3

2020 council two-candidate-preferred result

Candidate Party Votes % Swing
Peter Cumming Labor 13,581 61.4 -0.2
Megan Piccardi Liberal National 8,541 38.6 +0.2
Exhausted 961 4.2

2020 mayoral result

Candidate Party Votes % Swing
Pat Condren Labor 10,246 42.2 -0.3
Adrian Schrinner Liberal National 10,226 42.2 -4.4
Kath Angus Greens 2,321 9.6 +3.1
Karagh-Mae Kelly Animal Justice 813 3.4 +3.4
Jeff Hodges Motorists Party 237 1.0 +1.0
Frank Jordan Independent 127 0.5 +0.5
John Dobinson Independent 106 0.4 +0.4
Ben Gorringe Independent 92 0.4 +0.4
Jarrod Wirth Independent 88 0.4 -0.1
Informal 705 2.8

2020 mayoral two-party-preferred result

Candidate Party Votes % Swing
Pat Condren Labor 11,401 51.8 +2.9
Adrian Schrinner Liberal National 10,619 48.2 -2.9
Exhausted 2,236 9.2

Booth breakdown

Booths in Wynnum Manly have been divided into three parts: north, south-east and south-west.

Labor won a majority of the council two-party-preferred vote in every area, ranging from 62.1% in the south-east to 67.1% in the south-west.

Voter group GRN prim council ALP 2PP council ALP 2PP mayoral Total votes % of votes
South-East 12.6 62.1 50.3 1,918 7.5
North 11.8 62.4 54.1 1,842 7.2
South-West 11.3 67.1 56.7 1,375 5.4
Pre-poll 8.6 61.9 52.4 12,049 47.3
Postal 11.5 58.9 47.1 4,067 16.0
Other votes 12.9 57.6 57.4 1,832 7.2

Council election results in Wynnum Manly at the 2020 Brisbane City Council election
Toggle between two-party-preferred votes and primary votes for Labor, the Liberal National Party and the Greens.

Mayoral election results in Wynnum Manly at the 2020 Brisbane City Council election
Toggle between two-party-preferred votes and primary votes for the Labor, the Liberal National Party and the Greens.

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10 COMMENTS

  1. Labor could’ve easily won this ward if it wasn’t for a certain vote splitter by the name of Craig Moore

  2. Labor’s vote here fell 22%, barely half of which went to Moore. LNP and Greens were up on the vote significantly.

    So something else must have been going on here.

  3. Mark, I think that many of these bayside suburbs (including Lota, Manly and Wynnum) are trending more towards the Coalition – similar to the bayside suburbs of Melbourne in that they are recording higher proportion of those who are self-employed or in the trade profession. These voters are the ones who are moving away from Labor, so that may explain the result here.

    Overall, I think this ward may be seen as a lost cause for Labor if these voting trends continue into the future.

  4. The LNP have gained this ward. Labor may cop a big swing in Lytton in October.

    The LNP are also set for a landslide victory at the October state election, with polling and the results on Super Saturday showing how tired Queenslanders are of Labor. Labor’s safest seat (Inala) having turned into only a fairly safe seat in a single by-election while the safe Labor seat of Ipswich West was gained by the LNP. These may well be record swings. Furthermore, Labor barely gained ground in BCC wards, having lost Wynnum Manly to the LNP (with Calamvale currently “Labor likely” and Northgate currently “Labor ahead” according to Antony Green). The Greens got swings in most wards and indeed most suburbs as well as in the Lord Mayoral race but OPV stopped them from gaining marginal LNP wards like Central, Enoggera and Walter Taylor. Paddington is back in doubt as of now, but the Greens are ahead and I’m expecting that the Greens will win Paddington. In the Lord Mayoral race there was a swing against the LNP and Labor on primaries (which went to the Greens, Legalise Cannabis and a few independents), while on the TCP count there’s currently a 0.6% swing against the LNP, but Adrian Schrinner has still been comfortably re-elected. The same thing happened in the ward elections except that the TCP count in the ward elections saw a small swing to the LNP. However, although Labor did well in Deagon (mostly due to the fact that the LNP candidate was disendorsed but remained on the ballot paper as an LNP candidate), there was a swing against Labor in some of their safest wards, such as Forest Lake, which overlaps with the federal seat of Oxley (Labor’s safest seat in Queensland) and the state seat of Inala. Again, Labor retained Inala at yesterday’s by-election but there was indeed a huge swing against Labor, motivated by the growing unpopularity of Anthony Albanese and Steven Miles, the poor economic situation in Queensland (“the four crises”), controversy within the Vietnamese community after a local Vietnamese candidate-hopeful failed to be preselected as the Labor candidate (but still decided to run as an independent) and of course the loss of Annastacia Palaszczuk’s personal vote.

    What will it take for the Greens to win more wards in the increasingly progressive inner-city of Brisbane? They need to finish first at local, state and federal elections in those booths, otherwise they can’t win. Even though Labor preferences flow heavily to the Greens and vice versa, when the majority of LNP voters (along with a minority of Labor/Greens voters) exhaust their preferences, the LNP will likely finish first. For the Greens to win, they need to finish first or come very close in second place provided that the Labor vote is large enough to deliver a Greens victory. For Labor to win back wards from the LNP? They need to do better. They need to connect with their working-class base.

    It’s possible that David Crisafulli could campaign on a John Howard-style platform of supporting Howard’s battlers, but modified to 2024 state standards (which differ from 1996 federal standards since 1996 was 28 years ago).

  5. Craig Moore’s vote share went from 12.3% in the Council Election down to 3.3% in the state election after that last minute revelation. This is gonna come back to haunt Schrinner in 2028 for propping him up in this years Lord Mayor’s Australia Day Awards.

  6. @Caleb I doubt they would remember a brief encounter from four years ago. Craig probably won’t even run in 2028.

    As for whether the LNP hold this I really think it depends on how popular Alex Givney is and the general mood. BCC Labor have been practically irrelevant in Brisbane for the past 10 years.

    I think we should see swings away from the Greens in the inner-city assuming they continue to be radical, and if they really mess up even The Gabba could become marginal. The LNP do well around Kangaroo Point but the rest of The Gabba is at least supposed to be Greens heartland by Queensland standards. I’ll have to have a look at the booth results for South Brisbane. Remember on council results even Maiwar would actually be an LNP seat.

  7. @NP unlikely, the LNP are now in state government henceforth a protest vote come the Council Election along with an “It’s Time” factor.

  8. @Caleb we thought there’d be an it’s time factor in the ACT, turns out there really wasn’t outside of the outer suburbs. If Labor doesn’t gain back wards though that would be embarrassing, however while I would expect them to gain a few seats I don’t think they’ll get more seats than the LNP and they certainly won’t beat Schrinner. He’s a popular Lord Mayor with virtually no baggage.

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