Division of Blair
The Division of Blair is an Australian Electoral Division in Queensland.
Blair Australian House of Representatives Division | |
---|---|
Division of Blair (green) in Queensland, as of the 2019 federal election. | |
Created | 1998 |
MP | Shayne Neumann |
Party | Australia Labor Party |
Namesake | Harold Blair |
Electors | 113,521 (2019) |
Area | 6,472 km2 (2,498.9 sq mi) |
Demographic | Rural |
History
The division was created in 1998 and is named after Harold Blair, an Aboriginal singer and civil rights campaigner. The Division is based on Ipswich, and extends from rural and exurban areas west of Brisbane to the Scenic Rim and Lockyer Valley regions.
The founder of One Nation, Pauline Hanson, contested Blair in 1998. Her previous seat, Oxley, had been essentially split in half in the redistribution ahead of the election. Oxley was reconfigured into an exclusively Brisbane-based seat that tilted strongly toward Labor, while most of the rural area near Ipswich shifted to Blair. Although it was a very safe Liberal seat on paper, it contained most of Hanson's base, so it was a natural choice for Hanson to attempt to transfer. The Liberals, Nationals and Labor preferenced each other ahead of Hanson, allowing Liberal challenger Cameron Thompson to win on the eighth count. Thompson overtook the Labor candidate on National preferences, then defeated Hanson on Labor preferences.
Thompson held the seat without serious difficulty in the next two elections, and it was widely considered as a safe Liberal seat. In the 2006 redistribution, the 2004 Liberal margin of 11.2% was almost halved to 5.7%. Conservative-leaning Esk, Nanango and Kingaroy were transferred to Maranoa, while Blair was pushed further into Ipswich and Boonah. Blair had been rated as having received more funding promises from the Howard Government than any other electorate in the country.[1] The redistribution pushed Blair just outside the range of seats Labor needed to win government. In the 2007 election, Thompson was defeated by Labor challenger Shayne Neumann, with a 10.2 percent swing to Labor. Since then, the growth of Ipswich has allowed Neumann to consolidate his hold on the seat. For instance, in 2013, he actually picked up a small swing in his favour even as Labor lost government. In 2016, Neumann made Blair a safe Labor seat with 58.9 percent of the vote.
Members
Image | Member | Party | Term | Notes | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Cameron Thompson (1960–) |
Liberal | 3 October 1998 – 24 November 2007 |
Lost seat | ||
Shayne Neumann (1961–) |
Labor | 24 November 2007 – present |
Incumbent |
Election results
Party | Candidate | Votes | % | ±% | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Labor | Shayne Neumann | 29,987 | 31.26 | −9.79 | |
Liberal National | Robert Shearman | 27,844 | 29.03 | −0.58 | |
One Nation | Sharon Bell | 16,114 | 16.80 | +1.90 | |
Greens | Michelle Duncan | 8,325 | 8.68 | +1.97 | |
Independent | Simone Karandrews | 3,849 | 4.01 | +4.01 | |
United Australia | Majella Zimpel | 3,261 | 3.40 | +3.40 | |
Democratic Labour | John Quinn | 2,418 | 2.52 | +2.40 | |
Independent | John Turner | 2,118 | 2.21 | +0.06 | |
Conservative National | Peter Fitzpatrick | 2,009 | 2.09 | +2.09 | |
Total formal votes | 95,925 | 92.51 | −1.92 | ||
Informal votes | 7,765 | 7.49 | +1.92 | ||
Turnout | 103,690 | 91.34 | +0.17 | ||
Two-party-preferred result | |||||
Labor | Shayne Neumann | 49,123 | 51.21 | −6.93 | |
Liberal National | Robert Shearman | 46,802 | 48.79 | +6.93 | |
Labor hold | Swing | −6.93 |
References
- "Australia Votes 2007 - Blair". Australian Broadcasting Corporation. 21 December 2007. Retrieved 31 March 2013.
- Blair, QLD, Tally Room 2019, Australian Electoral Commission.