2024 Brisbane City Council election

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

2024 Brisbane City Council election

← 2020 16 March 2024 2028 →
Opinion polls
Registered845,501
Turnout85.31%
Lord Mayor
  First party Second party Third party
 
LordMayorAdrianSchrinner (cropped).png
Jonno Sriranganathan 1 (cropped).png
Candidate Adrian Schrinner Tracey Price Jonathan Sriranganathan
Party Liberal National Labor Greens
Leader since 31 March 2019 6 August 2023 16 August 2023
Popular vote 343,330 186,250 137,454
Percentage 48.59% 26.36% 19.45%
Swing Increase 0.85 Decrease 4.58 Increase 4.05
TPP 56.35% 43.65%
TPP swing Increase 0.03 Decrease 0.03

Lord Mayor before election

Adrian Schrinner
Liberal National

Elected Lord Mayor

Adrian Schrinner
Liberal National

Councillors

All 26 wards on the City Council
13 wards needed for a majority
Party Leader % Seats +/–
Liberal National Adrian Schrinner 46.89 18 −1
Labor Jared Cassidy 26.91 5 0
Greens Jonathan Sriranganathan 23.15 2 +1
Independent N/A 3.05 1 0
This lists parties that won seats. See the complete results below.
Results by ward

The 2024 Brisbane City Council election was held on 16 March 2024 to elect a lord mayor and 26 councillors to the City of Brisbane. The election was held as part of the statewide local government elections in Queensland, Australia. Brisbane City Council elections are significant in the scope of Australian local government politics, as the council is the largest in the country by population, area and has the largest economy of any Local Government Area.[1][2][3]

The Liberal National Party has held Brisbane's mayoralty since the election of Campbell Newman at the 2004 election, and a majority of wards since their landslide victory in the 2008 election. The party was led by incumbent Lord Mayor Adrian Schrinner, who succeeded Graham Quirk on 8 April 2019.[4]

The election resulted in the re-election of the Liberal National Party under Adrian Schrinner, leading to a fifth consecutive term with a majority of wards for the party, along with a sixth consecutive mayoral term.[5]

In the lord mayoral election, incumbent Schrinner was opposed by Tracey Price and Jonathan Sriranganathan, for Labor and the Greens respectively, along with a Legalise Cannabis candidate and two Independents.[6][7] Schrinner was re-elected as Lord Mayor with an estimated two-candidate-preferred result (against Tracey Price) of 56.2% to 43.8%, which constituted a 0.1% swing to the Labor candidate.[7]

In the ward elections, both the LNP and Labor lost ground to the Greens in many wards across the city, with the party successfully gaining the LNP ward of Paddington and gaining primary vote swings of over 10% in multiple other wards.[8][9][10][11] Labor also managed to win Calamvale from the LNP, gaining a Brisbane City Council ward for the first time in the twenty-first century,[12] but significant swings against Labor in all Labor-held wards except Deagon (where the LNP candidate was disendorsed) resulted in the LNP gaining the formerly-safe Labor ward of Wynnum Manly.[13]

Overall, the election resulted in the Liberal National Party's majority reducing to 18 wards, falling for the first time since the 2004 election; Labor maintained a total of 5 wards with the exchange of Wynnum Manly for Calamvale; the Greens position increased to 2 wards with the gain of Paddington; and Nicole Johnson retained Tennyson as an Independent.[14]

Background[edit]

In April 2023, new legislation passed by the Parliament of Queensland would have an effect on all of Queensland's local government areas (LGAs) in future elections. The bill, Local Government Electoral and Other Legislation (Expenditure Caps) Amendment Bill 2022, sets caps on electoral expenditure for all local governments across the state.[15] The main takeaways vis-à-vis the Brisbane City Council elections are:[16][17]

  • The caps are tiered to take into consideration the number of electors in local government areas
  • For Mayoral candidates, caps range from $30,000 in council areas with 30,000 or fewer electors through to $1.3 million for the Brisbane City Council
  • Expenditure caps for Councillor candidates range from $15,000 for council areas with 20,000 or fewer electors up to $55,000 for Brisbane City Council wards
  • The scheme applies for the seven months prior to a quadrennial election, and from the day a by-election notice is published, through to polling day

Mayoral candidates[edit]

As incumbent Lord Mayor, Adrian Schrinner was the Liberal National candidate, confirming in February 2023 that he would seek re-election.[18]

North Brisbane lawyer and small business owner Tracey Price[19] was announced as the ALP candidate for Lord Mayor of Brisbane on 4 August 2023.[20][21]

After resigning his seat in March 2023 to give way to another Greens councillor, Jonathan Sriranganathan was confirmed as the Queensland Greens' candidate for Lord Mayor in August 2023.[22]

Pendulums[edit]

Results[edit]

Lord Mayor[edit]

2024 Queensland mayoral elections: Brisbane[23][24]
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Liberal National Adrian Schrinner 303,702 48.33 +0.59
Labor Tracey Price 166,051 26.42 −4.52
Greens Jonathan Sriranganathan 123,380 19.63 +4.23
Legalise Cannabis Clive Brazier 20,596 3.28 +3.28
Independent Bruce Tanti 9,122 1.45 +1.45
Independent Gilbert Holmes 5,555 0.88 +0.88
Total formal votes 628,406 97.81 +0.50
Informal votes 14,051 2.19 -0.50
Turnout 642,457
Two-party-preferred result
Liberal National Adrian Schrinner 257,253 55.2 −1.2
Labor Tracey Price 209,087 44.8 +1.2
Liberal National hold Swing −1.2

Wards[edit]

2024 Queensland local elections: Brisbane
Party Votes % Swing Seats Change
  Liberal National 305,369 47.0 +1.1 18 Decrease 1
  Labor 174,616 26.9 −6.0 5 Steady
  Greens 149,463 23.0 +5.2 2 Increase 1
  Independent 20,071 3.1 −0.1 1 Steady
Two-party-preferred vote
  Liberal National 55.4 +1.8
  Labor 44.6 −1.8
Results are not final. Last updated on 20 March 2024.

Wards changing hands[edit]

Seat Pre-election Swing Post-election
Party Member Margin Margin Member Party
Calamvale Liberal National Angela Owen 2.24 3.95 1.71 Emily Kim Labor
Paddington Liberal National Clare Jenkinson 0.71 1.47 0.76 Seal Chong Wah Greens
Wynnum Manly Labor Sara Whitmee 11.39 12.52 1.13 Alex Givney Liberal National

Maps[edit]

Ward elections[edit]

Candidates[edit]

Sitting councillors are shown in bold text.

Ward Held by Labor candidate LNP candidate Greens candidate Other candidates
Lord Mayor LNP Tracey Price Adrian Schrinner Jonathan Sriranganathan Clive Brazier (LCQ)
Gilbert Holmes (Ind)
Bruce Tanti (Ind)
Bracken Ridge LNP Thomas Stephen Sandy Landers John Harbison
Calamvale LNP Emily Kim Angela Owen Andrea Wildin
Central LNP Ash Murray Vicki Howard Wendy Aghdam
Chandler LNP Tabatha Young Ryan Murphy Alex David
Coorparoo LNP Alicia Weiderman Fiona Cunningham Kath Angus
Deagon Labor Jared Cassidy Brock Alexander (disendorsed) Edward Naus
Doboy LNP Alex Cossu Lisa Atwood James Smart
Enoggera LNP Taylar Wojtasik Andrew Wines Quintessa Denniz
Forest Lake Labor Charles Strunk Kylie Gates Vi Phuong Nguyen
Hamilton LNP Leah Malzard Julia Dixon Edward Cordery
Holland Park LNP Shane Warren Krista Adams David Ford
Jamboree LNP Leili Golafshani Sarah Hutton Chris Richardson
MacGregor LNP Ashwina Gotame Steven Huang Brent Tideswell
Marchant LNP Darren Mitchell Danita Parry Mekayla Anog
McDowall LNP Mark Wolhuter Tracy Davis Joshua Sanderson David Dallaston (Ind)
Moorooka Labor Steve Griffiths Peter Zhuang Melissa McArdle
Morningside Labor Lucy Collier Allie Griffin Linda Barry
Northgate LNP Vicki Ryan Adam Allan Tiana Peneha
Paddington LNP Sún Etheridge Clare Jenkinson Seal Chong Wah
Pullenvale LNP Roberta Albrecht Greg Adermann Charles Druckmann Kate Richards (Ind)
Runcorn LNP John Prescott Kim Marx Emma Eastaughffe
Tennyson Independent Kane Hart Henry Swindon River Kearns Nicole Johnston (Ind)
The Gabba Greens Rebecca McIntosh Laura Wong Trina Massey
The Gap LNP Ben Long Steven Toomey Ann Aitken
Walter Taylor LNP Rebecca Hack Penny Wolff Michaela Sargent
Wynnum Manly Labor Sara Whitmee Alexandra Givney Bel Ellis Craig Moore (Ind)

Opinion polling[edit]

Lord Mayoral vote[edit]

Date Firm Sample Primary vote 2PP vote
LNP ALP GRN LCQ AJP CLM IND LNP ALP
8–14 March 2024 DemosAU[25] 1,034 46.7% 25.8% 21.6% 3.1% 2.8%[h] 57.7% 42.3%
28 March 2020 Election 47.7% 30.9% 15.4% 3.1% 0.9% 2.0%[i] 56.3% 43.7%

Ward vote[edit]

Date Firm Sample Primary vote
LNP ALP GRN AJP CLM IND
8–14 March 2024 DemosAU[25] 1,034 43.7% 31.3% 25.0%
28 March 2020 Election 45.9% 32.9% 17.8% 0.1% 0.1% 3.2%

See also[edit]

Notes[edit]

  1. ^ Jenkinson succeeded Peter Matic as councillor for Paddington in June 2023.
  2. ^ Wolff succeeded James Mackay as councillor for Walter Taylor in October 2023.
  3. ^ Parry succeeded Fiona Hammond as councillor for Marchant in November 2023.
  4. ^ Dixon succeeded David McLachlan as councillor for Hamilton in August 2023.
  5. ^ Collier succeeded Kara Cook as councillor for Morningside in May 2023.
  6. ^ Whitmee succeeded Peter Cumming as councillor for Wynnum Manly in May 2023.
  7. ^ Massey succeeded Jonathan Sriranganathan as councillor for The Gabba in May 2023.
  8. ^ 1.4% for Bruce Tanti, 1.4% for Gilbert Holmes[25]
  9. ^ 0.7% for Frank Jordan, 0.6% for John Dobinson, 0.4% for Ben Gorringe, 0.3% for Jarrod Wirth

References[edit]

  1. ^ "Review of Ward Boundaries – 2019 Final Determination Brisbane City Council" (PDF). ecq.qld.gov.au. Electoral Commission of Queensland (ECQ). 2019. Archived (PDF) from the original on 17 March 2024.
  2. ^ "Facts and figures: Australia". lgiu.org. Local Government Information Unit (LGIU).
  3. ^ "Brisbane – Council of Capital City Lord Mayors". lordmayors.org. Brisbane City Council manages Australia's biggest local government budget at $3.1billion for 2018/2019.
  4. ^ "Will Brisbane City Council be next to be swept away in an electoral Greenslide?". ABC News. 2 June 2022. Retrieved 28 September 2023.
  5. ^ "Brisbane City Council Election 2024 Results". ABC News. 22 March 2024. Retrieved 22 March 2024.
  6. ^ Queensland, Electoral Commission of (1 July 2019). "Electoral Commission of Queensland". results.elections.qld.gov.au. Retrieved 22 March 2024.
  7. ^ a b "Lord Mayor - BCC Electorate, Candidates, Results". abc.net.au. 22 March 2024. Retrieved 22 March 2024.
  8. ^ "Paddington (Key seat) - BCC Electorate, Candidates, Results". abc.net.au. 22 March 2024. Retrieved 22 March 2024.
  9. ^ "Enoggera (Key seat) - BCC Electorate, Candidates, Results". abc.net.au. 21 March 2024. Retrieved 22 March 2024.
  10. ^ "Morningside - BCC Electorate, Candidates, Results". abc.net.au. 22 March 2024. Retrieved 22 March 2024.
  11. ^ "The Gap (Key seat) - BCC Electorate, Candidates, Results". abc.net.au. 21 March 2024. Retrieved 22 March 2024.
  12. ^ "Calamvale - BCC Electorate, Candidates, Results". abc.net.au. 22 March 2024. Retrieved 22 March 2024.
  13. ^ "Wynnum Manly - BCC Electorate, Candidates, Results". abc.net.au. 20 March 2024. Retrieved 22 March 2024.
  14. ^ "Party Totals". abc.net.au. 22 March 2024. Retrieved 22 March 2024.
  15. ^ "Changes to rent increases to give Queenslanders who rent a fair go". statements.qld.gov.au. 18 April 2023.
  16. ^ "Local government elections". statedevelopment.qld.gov.au. Department of State Development, Infrastructure, Local Government and Planning.
  17. ^ "Changes to rent increases to give Queenslanders who rent a fair go". nationaltribune.com.au. The National Tribune. 18 April 2023.
  18. ^ "Brisbane Lord Mayor Adrian Schrinner confirms he will contest next 2024 election". The Courier-Mail. 20 February 2023.
  19. ^ McKay, Jodi (9 June 2023). "Brisbane lawyer Tracey Price in the mix as Labor's Brisbane City Council lord mayoral candidate". ABC News.
  20. ^ Arvier, Tim (4 August 2023). "Labor confirms candidate for 2024 Brisbane lord mayoral race". Brisbane Times.
  21. ^ McKay, Jodi (5 August 2023). "Labor announces lawyer Tracey Price as Brisbane mayoral candidate". ABC News.
  22. ^ Atkins, Dennis (11 July 2023). "Dennis Atkins: Is Brisbane about to become the Greenest city in Australia?". InQueensland.
  23. ^ "Lord Mayor - BCC Electorate, Candidates, Results". Australian Broadcasting Corporation. 3 April 2024.
  24. ^ "Electoral Commission of Queensland". July 2019.
  25. ^ a b c "Schrinner on track for re-election in Brisbane City Council Lord Mayoral Race - Demos AU". demosau.com. 14 March 2024. Retrieved 14 March 2024.