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Why it's Labor who is copping the Longman protest vote

By Graham Young - posted Friday, 27 July 2018


If polls are right then Longman may be only the second seat to be taken from an opposition by a government since Federation.

Longman is typical of the outer-ring suburban seats that decide the fate of governments in Australia: full of new families, and retirees, a feeder suburb where people leave home to go to work, trading mortgage payments against miles in the car.

These are aspirational voters, with realism. They take modest steps towards their goals and tend to be frugal and careful.

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Nestled between Brisbane and the Sunshine Coast it has two major population centres – Caboolture/Morayfield and Bribie Island - and a swathe of hinterland.

Caboolture was a dairying centre with some small cropping and farming. Today most of Queensland’s strawberries, for example, are still grown in the area.

Morayfield was tacked under it, and is an urban area threaded by ribbon industrial and retail development along the major roads.

Bribie Island is a rapidly-developing, economy, beachside retirement area. You can buy a new house and land there for $349,900, or for $386,000 you’ll get waterfront and a marina berth.

The area is swing territory, home to two of the rising stars of the state Labor Party – Mark Ryan and Steven Miles, although since its inception it has been won more times by the Libs.

So what makes this a possible win for the LNP now?

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First there is the margin - just 0.79%. It wouldn’t take too much to change that, a low turnout might be enough, without any change in underlying voter sentiment.

And that margin was achieved after a 7.71% swing – the largest in Queensland. That suggests that there may have been dissatisfaction with the previous member, and there was.

Electors thought he was too young, too aloof, too cocky, and they didn’t like him being key plotter in toppling Tony Abbott. And there were morality issues, like his stance on gay marriage, all of which culminated in One Nation directing preferences against him.

And One Nation will play a part again. They held the state seat of Caboolture briefly in 1998, and according to polls are on around 14% of the vote.

In a recent visit to the area I was told that immigration was the number one issue by numerous voters. Growth issues came next. Then I got lectures on how we ought to only buy locally grown or made. You can see why One Nation polls well.

But Labor, in an effort to push the Greens out of the inner-city vote has not been talking to these people.

Multiculturalism and identity politics aren’t things in Longman. Most people are of European extraction, and they are nationalists, not cosmopolitans.

There is little enthusiasm for either Turnbull or Shorten, with the only party displaying Turnbull photos, Labor, and the only party displaying Shorten photos, the LNP.

However, Liberal lieutenants, particularly neighbouring MP Peter Dutton have been tuned-in to the wave-length, talking about immigration and security issues, and Turnbull has started talking about population.

Trust is also a factor. Shorten has a problem in this area, made worse by his candidate. Many electors are sceptical of her story as to how she renounced her UK citizenship.

During the last week or so some “genius” in the ALP campaign decided to release the information that the LNP candidate, Trevor Ruthenberg, had claimed a military medal on his parliamentary website he wasn’t entitled to.

Ruthenberg immediately admitted to the mistake, and received support from some RSL members. The Courier Mail doubled down on the story later in the week because the same medal was mentioned on his personal website.

This had the effect of alerting people to Ruthenberg’s military service, a positive for him in this sort of territory, and focussed attention back on Lamb’s integrity. A readily admitted mistake on a medal seems trifling compared to a by-election, and dirty laundry, aired in the nation’s national parliament.

The ALP’s campaign is also a stale cookie-cutter amalgam of the last state and federal campaigns. They’ve raised political zombies to new life, trying to frighten voters with the spectres of long-departed state premier Campbell Newman, and a “Mediscare” 2.1 based on the Caboolture hospital.

Normally by-elections are an opportunity for electors to protest against sitting governments, without taking the risk of changing them. What Labor has managed to do is to put itself in a position where the protest vote is likely to work against it.

This is further accentuated by Shorten’s big target strategy. For example, what will the retirees in the area think about his plan to take the dividend imputation rebate away from them?

But is this good for Malcolm Turnbull? While a win will rally the backbench, and neutralise rogue potential floor-crossing backbenchers, it might also fracture Labor and hand the leadership to Anthony Albanese.

It will also incline voters to think that Malcolm Turnbull might just win the next election.

Turnbull’s best chance in 2019 is for Shorten to be his opponent, with an expectation that Shorten will win. Winning the battle for Longman might cost Turnbull the war.

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An edited version of this article was published by the Australian Financial Review.



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About the Author

Graham Young is chief editor and the publisher of On Line Opinion. He is executive director of the Australian Institute for Progress, an Australian think tank based in Brisbane, and the publisher of On Line Opinion.

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