Dickson – Australia 2025

LNP 1.7%

Incumbent MP
Peter Dutton, since 2001.

Geography
Dickson covers the north-western suburbs of Brisbane and adjoining rural areas. It covers most of the former Pine Rivers Shire, now included in the Moreton Bay Council. Suburbs include Ferny Hills, Albany Creek, Strathpine, Petrie and Kallangur. Further west it includes areas such as Dayboro, Mount Samson and Samford Village.

History
Dickson was created for the 1993 election, though it was not filled until a supplementary election a month after the general election following the death of an independent candidate during the campaign. It was won for the ALP by Michael Lavarch, who transferred to the seat from Fisher, which he had represented since 1987, defeating the Liberal candidate, future Queensland state Liberal Party leader Dr Bruce Flegg.

Lavarch served as Attorney-General in the Keating government, but was defeated in the 1996 landslide by Liberal Tony Smith.

Smith lost the Liberal endorsement for the 1998 election and recontested the seat as an Independent. A leakage of preferences from his 9% primary vote presumably assisted the narrow, 176-vote victory by ALP star recruit, former Democrats leader Cheryl Kernot.

Kernot was defeated in 2001 by the Liberals’ Peter Dutton, who has held the seat ever since.

Peter Dutton has held his seat ever since. He served as a junior minister in the final term of the Howard government and as a senior minister in the Coalition government from 2013 until 2022. After the Coalition’s defeat at the 2022 election, he was elected as leader of the opposition.

Candidates

Assessment
Dickson is quite a marginal seat and it is worth watching. Labor did quite poorly in Queensland in 2022 compared to other states. If they benefit from incumbency they could pick up a substantial amount of ground in Queensland.

It’s also worth noting that Dutton has increased his profile now as leader of his party, which will probably improve his position in his local seat.

2022 result

Candidate Party Votes % Swing
Peter Dutton Liberal National 41,657 42.1 -3.9
Ali France Labor 31,396 31.7 +0.4
Vinnie Batten Greens 12,871 13.0 +3.0
Tamera Gibson One Nation 5,312 5.4 +0.2
Alina Karen Ward United Australia 2,717 2.7 +0.5
Alan Buchbach Independent 2,222 2.2 +2.2
Thor Prohaska Independent 1,618 1.6 -0.7
Lloyd Russell Liberal Democrats 1,236 1.2 +1.3
Informal 3,996 3.9 -0.5

2022 two-party-preferred result

Candidate Party Votes % Swing
Peter Dutton Liberal National 51,196 51.7 -2.9
Ali France Labor 47,833 48.3 +2.9

Booth breakdown

Booths have been divided into three areas. Most of the population lies on the urban fringe along the eastern edge of the seat. These booths have been split between north-east and south-east. The remaining booths have been grouped as ‘west’.

The Liberal National Party won a majority of the two-party-preferred vote in the south-east (51.1%) and the west (54.7%), as well as on the pre-poll and other votes. Labor won 52.5% in the north-east.

The Greens came third, with a primary vote ranging from 13.2% in the north-east to 18% in the west, but just 11.7% on the pre-poll.

Voter group GRN prim LNP 2PP Total votes % of votes
North-East 13.2 47.5 16,958 17.1
South-East 15.8 51.1 14,310 14.5
West 18.0 54.7 4,621 4.7
Pre-poll 11.7 52.3 38,111 38.5
Other votes 12.4 53.4 25,029 25.3

Election results in Dickson at the 2022 federal election
Toggle between two-party-preferred votes and primary votes for the Liberal National Party, Labor and the Greens.

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374 COMMENTS

  1. The 130k is a diversion and an effort to ignite the local vollies and force the Liberals to try and defend a seat they are likely safe in. Dutton has nothing to worry about except for the rest of the country where he is most definitely behind

  2. I’ll just pop in here and add some anecdotal information.
    While I don’t live in Dickson, I am based in Ryan and I work across large parts of Dickson six days a week for nearly 14 years. From what I’ve seen on the ground, this is by far the election with the most varied party signage—and the least presence of the usual “solid wall” of Dutton.

  3. Daily Telegraph is reporting three polls:

    Freshwater (Lib Internal) has it at 43-57 to Dutton

    ALP Internal is 50-50

    uComms (Teal Internal) 51.7-48.3 to Ali France

  4. I feel like the impression Dutton would easily boost his margin here was due to him steadily increasing his approval rating and viability as alternative PM over about 2.5 years since becoming opposition leader.

    But as his approval rating has rapidly deteriorated since the campaign began, and he & the Liberals have made so many missteps, and today’s YouGov poll even has a primary vote swing against the Coalition larger than Dutton’s margin here, there’s every chance that the prospect of him being PM actually hinders rather than helps his odds at holding his own seat.

    He’s clearly still the favourite to hold and I’d predict a Dutton win, but I’d say the seat is very much in play now, whereas 2 months ago I would have said it wasn’t.

  5. The overall sense that Dutton will lose here doesn’t feel compelling enough. Yes him and some of his candidates have made some serious missteps that I’d say has ended hopes of a Coalition victory this year, but in Dickson I wouldn’t say he’s offensive to the community. He’s a known-quantity, and his position as Opposition Leader should give him enough profile to hang on here, and I expect a swing to him.

    I understand why Labor would be trying hard here, but I get the vibes they should look elsewhere. Brisbane seats like Bonner and Brisbane feel more winnable and have lower-profile MPs in comparison to Dutton who is well-known. The fact they are diverting $130k here is really interesting as you would expect they would want to sandbag marginals like Blair that the LNP have eyes on.

    Another point: David Crisafulli could be an interesting factor: last I heard in a poll he was the most popular Premier in the country. And the last opinion poll for the federal election had it 56-44 to the LNP. If he still has the halo around him from the election and Cyclone Alfred, campaigning with Dutton would seal a win here IMO. I think the swing to the LNP here could be either from <1% to up to 5%. Eitherway he should hold with a swing.

  6. I also think Dutton will hold, unfortunately.

    The best chance for him to have been punted was in 2022 along with Frydenberg who did lose his blue ribbon seat. A potential sliding door moment if that happened and the Liberals were deprived of their leadership contenders post-Scomo.

    The demographics and Dutton’s profile over the past 24 years will help him, but equally the said factors that have been mentioned to ad nauseam (e.g. the cyclone and fundraiser) could trip him up. He’ll hold on but don’t be surprised if his margin doesn’t increase by much.

  7. I think Dutton is in trouble here. The ALP internal polling is 50-50.

    I’d say that he will retain but this isn’t a sure bet at all. I wouldn’t be surprised if there’s a swing against him because the ALP has made serious headway in Brisbane with the recent polling.

    Whether he gets a swing against or towards him will depend on how badly the LNP go nationally as well. The polling nationwide is increasingly looking like the expected seats that the LNP a month ago were 100% confident they’d gain like Gilmore, Patterson, Bennelong, Robertson in NSW, McEwen, Dunkley, and Aston in VIC, and Bulwinkel in WA are now looking increasingly like Labor retains.

    The LNP nationwide is in serious strife. The ALP is now polling better than they did at the 2022 federal election which shows how much distractions like the WFH backflip, the public sector job cuts and a now disendorsed candidate in Whitlam who has been exposed as a far right sympathiser has really hurt the LNP’s standing with moderate swing voters.

    The LNP considering withdrawing from the Paris Agreement is political suicide as well. It’s as if the LNP learned none of their lessons from 2022.

  8. News.com.au reporting on a Ucomms seat poll with ALP ahead 52-48. Don’t really believe it given he has a higher profile as opposition leader but I guess gives credence to Labor putting more resources into the seat

  9. Part of me says Dutton is a marginal seat master, and will hang on in the same way he has hung on in the past.

    Part of me is preparing the popcorn for election night.

  10. AB, I am not sure if the LNP saw what happened with Trump in the US and thought maybe it would work here.

    The basic problem is that Australia is nowhere near as conservative as the US. The country is more urbanised and tertiary educated voters make up a larger proportion of the population. Also, compulsory voting helps provide a moderating influence so a far right, culture war type message is unlikely to resonate well.

    Finally, Australians are known for being ‘modest’ in general. Most people value honesty and do not take kindly to a ‘bravado’ type attitude that Trump and his backers are offering. That is probably why Trump is not popular in the country overall, even amongst Liberal/Coalition voters. Only the hardcore conservatives who vote for fringe right parties like Palmer United and One Nation strongly support Trump.

  11. AB23- internal polling of any party released before the election is worthless-its only disclosed in an atemptent to influence voters.The much more accurate polls are the ones we learn about after the election.

  12. The LNP seem to be getting caught out by two things:

    – the Trump uncertainty – leaving aside any Trump policy comparisons. Potential uncertainty – economic, national security – plays into the hand of an incumbent government.
    – lack of policy – the backflips this week show that there has been little policy formulation – and it is all a bit on the fly.

    Labor are looking more like being reelected – it might turn out to be a curse for them as I do not recall an election in my memory where there has been so little enthusiasm except may be 2010. I have had a thought for a while that Dutton would not mind a close but respectable loss so that he can rework the team – it is painfully shallow at present.

  13. The Trumpets are very Trump exposed as they have gone full ‘ Trump’. They have nowhere to go as it is pretty obvious that there is a general loathing for all things ‘trump’ right across the community.

  14. No one is talking about the very effective grassroots campaign by the Independent candidate Ellie Smith. Her preferences could be a critical influence on the outcome of such small margins.

  15. The sample of the poll was 3500 people from Ucomms, this electorate has a long history of being close particularly in the last 3 elections. Dickson was held by Labor in 1998 and would have been held by Labor on these boundaries in 2007, so maybe with effort Labor is putting they could peal this seat off the LNP. This will be very interesting to watch on election night.

  16. @AB23 I don’t think scrapping the Paris agreement is political suicide – in fact it might be a game changer even at this late stage. I know amongst a certain set of Guardian readers it is an article of faith that everyone thinks it is great, but all around the world opponents of net zero etc are gaining ground.
    Again, I don’t think saving 41k Canberra public servants is a big win for Labor. What is a big win for Labor was the WFH policy, which was designed for those Canberra PS but didn’t take a political genius to make people think Dutton was coming for your WFH. That and the cyclone allowing Albo to look Prime Ministerial again and Dutton coming under some pressure, which was the opposite of where we were in January/February.

  17. About the $130K Labor spend here, I think the end goal isn’t to get Ali France elected but rather it’s more to do with mind games and giving them a scare or to show strength. If it’s in play, Dutton and the LNP would have to shift attention back home and away from ‘must-win’ electorates elsewhere.

    What I reckon will help Dutton are the: likely swings to LNP in the outer suburbs (which would extend to Dickson), the reversal of the anti-Morrison vote, the splitting of the non-LNP vote (teal and Labor) and the loss of the UAP vote. I think many UAP and PHON voters would vote tactically to prevent Ellie Smith or Ali France from winning.

    The most ideal times for Labor to remove Dutton were in 2007 and 2022 and he managed to hang on both times.

  18. @Yoh An, agree that real reason why Trump will be very unpopular in Australia is because the Australian Society just does not like anyone with a big egos which applies to anyone from the top job to the bottom (aka. Tall Poppy Syndrome) which encourages Australians to stay modest.
    This why it is harder for Political Revolutions (such as mass protest) to gain traction in Australia (even if they are significant issues) unlike what use see in US (with Black Lives Matter) or France (with Yellow Vest Movement) and because compulsory voting alongside majority of the population only supporting modesty, a person uninterested in politics gets more political sway than someone who is politically vocal.

  19. @votante Ellie Smith won’t make the count..like grayndler swinging to the greens when Albo is gone this will probably go labor once Dutton is gone

  20. @Ek April 11, 2025 at 7:27 pm
    Can’t see how Ellie Smith could preference Labor over Dutton and draw many Liberal voters.
    If Labor, Greens and the Non Teal Indies put Smith over Dutton, she could preference Dutton above Labor and win from 2nd on the 2CP.

  21. I don’t think Ellie Smith will crack the 2CP either.

    Generally teals and in general, many centrist independents, run open tickets (HTV card just shows where to put the number 1) and don’t show preference for either major party. This is partly to avoid acusations of being partisan.

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