LNP 29.50%
Incumbent MP
John-Paul Langbroek, since 2004.
Geography
Gold Coast. Surfers Paradise covers the central Gold Coast suburbs of Surfers Paradise, Benowa, Broadbeach, Bundall, Paradise Waters, Main Beach, the Southport Spit and parts of Ashmore.
History
The seat of Surfers Paradise has existed since 1972. Barring a single by-election, the seat has always been won by either the Country/National party or the Liberal Party, and has been held by two leaders of the conservative side of politics.
The seat was first won in 1972 by the Country Party candidate, Gold Coast mayor Bruce Small. Small stepped down as mayor in 1973 and returned to the post in 1976.
In 1977 Small was defeated by the Liberal Party’s Bruce Bishop. Bishop held the seat for one term, losing in 1980 to National Party candidate Rob Borbidge.
Borbidge was appointed to the ministry when Joh Bjelke-Petersen was replaced as Premier by Mike Ahern. Borbidge served as a minister until the National Party lost in 1989.
Borbidge was elected as National Party leader in 1991, leading the party to the 1992 and 1995 elections. In 1996, a by-election result saw the Labor Party lose its majority, and Borbidge formed a minority government in coalition with the Liberal Party and with the support of an independent MP.
Borbidge lost power at the 1998 election. He served as Opposition Leader in the first term of the Beattie government. After the Nationals and Liberals suffered a massive defeat in 2001, Borbidge resigned as Nationals leader and as Member for Surfers Paradise.
At the 2001 by-election, both the Liberals and Nationals contested the seat. Borbidge had polled 49.8% at the general election, but the new National Party candidate barely managed 8%.
Liberal candidate John-Paul Langbroek polled 21%, but lost to independent councillor Lex Bell, who polled almost 36%.
In 2004, Bell lost to Langbroek, who ran without National Party competition.
Langbroek, along with all other Liberal MPs, joined the newly formed Liberal National Party in 2008. When the LNP lost the 2009 election, leader Lawrence Springborg stepped down and Langbroek was elected as LNP leader.
Langbroek led the party until March 2011, when he was replaced as party leader by Lord Mayor of Brisbane Campbell Newman, elected as party leader from outside Parliament.
Langbroek won a fourth term in 2012, and has served as Minister for Education, Training and Employment since the LNP took power.
Candidates
- Jonathon Scoones (Family First)
- John-Paul Langbroek (Liberal National)
- Helen Hunt (Greens)
- Stephen Gardner (Palmer United)
- Josh Blundell-Thornton (Labor)
Assessment
Surfers Paradise is a very safe LNP seat.
2012 election result
Candidate | Party | Votes | % | Swing |
John-Paul Langbroek | Liberal National | 18,993 | 72.63 | +13.61 |
Matthew Donovan | Labor | 4,325 | 16.54 | -10.93 |
Helen Wainwright | Greens | 1,861 | 7.12 | +0.58 |
Andrea Raymond | Family First | 971 | 3.71 | +3.71 |
2012 two-party-preferred result
Candidate | Party | Votes | % | Swing |
John-Paul Langbroek | Liberal National | 19,688 | 79.50 | +12.98 |
Matthew Donovan | Labor | 5,078 | 20.50 | -12.98 |
Booth breakdown
Booths in Surfers Paradise have been split into two parts: east and west.
While the LNP won a large majority across the seat, the LNP vote was higher in the east and the Labor vote was higher in the west.
The LNP two-party-preferred vote ranged from 77.5% in the west to 80.7% in the east.
The Electoral Commission does not publish two-party-preferred figures by polling place, so two-party-preferred figures in the following table and map are estimates.
Voter group | LNP prim % | ALP prim % | LNP 2PP % | Total | % of votes |
East | 73.90 | 15.52 | 80.67 | 9,330 | 35.68 |
West | 70.23 | 18.10 | 77.55 | 7,601 | 29.07 |
Other votes | 73.33 | 16.28 | 79.89 | 9,219 | 35.25 |
How is this area so Liberal voting? Demographically it looks like a typical Labor seat.
Lots of rich people living in mansions on the riverside, combine that with a strong redneck population who hate immigrants but can’t explain why, and you have all the makings of a conservative electorate. They also love JP.
Very transient population. A lot of the usual bogan and dole budging labor voters aren’t registered to vote here