The latest local
government elections in Queensland, along with the by election for former
Premier Anna Bligh’s state seat of South Brisbane, may point to a fundamental
shift in popular mood back in favour of growth and development. After many
years of anti-growth policy paranoia, it’s a refreshing wind if it lasts.
Was the electoral storm that swept ‘Can Do’ Campbell Newman
and the conservative LNP to power only a few weeks ago something more than a
direct reaction to a failed state Labor government? Subsequent local government
election results state-wide may point to a more fundamental shift in community
attitude. Why? Because one month after a
resounding rejection of the state government, voters once again lined up to
sink the knife into incumbent mayoral candidates who have presided over needless
bureaucracy, excessive red tape and anti-growth policies disguised in political
or media spin. Those who expected a bounce back to Labor from voters
recognising the very large mandate of the new LNP state government were proven
badly wrong. Even Labor’s stronghold state seat of South Brisbane, narrowly
held by the former Premier at the last election, barely got over the line to
Labor this time in a by election.
Is this a sign that anti-growth and anti development
policies, manifesting themselves in all manner of precautionary principles, red
tape and green tape and which effectively ground the Queensland economy to a
standstill, are on the nose? Maybe it’s not just the Labor ‘brand’ but bad
public policy per se which is being rejected. ? The real economy – undisguised
by the statistical support of the booming resources sector – has been
suffering, with construction activity across the board falling to record lows,
interstate migration and population growth slowing to record lows, and house
prices and personal balance sheets under stress. Rising utility costs, partly
or largely (depending on your view) driven by green-tinged policy settings, have
hurt average families. New housing costs have risen and proven a barrier for a
generation of young families wanting to enter the market without having to
sacrifice everything in exchange for a mortgage they can’t afford. Overall, the
people are clearly pissed off. And they showed it.
In Brisbane, Lord Mayor Quirk – a prominent anointee of ‘Can
Do’ Campbell Newman - was returned with
an increased majority. And elsewhere, pro-growth candidates replaced incumbents
whose administrations had presided over growth in regulatory process with
little by way of measureable outcomes. In Redlands, a reputedly notorious local
authority in terms of its hostile attitude to growth and development, Mayor
Melva Hobson was turfed out in favour of pro-growth candidate and new Mayor,
Karen Williams, (Williams scoring 69% of the primary vote to Hobson’s 31%).
On the Gold Coast, pro-growth candidate and Chamber of
Commerce President Tom Tait won resoundingly with 37% of the primary Mayoral
vote. The next closest candidate was Eddie Saroff – a long serving Gold Coast
Councillor and former Labor federal candidate, on 17.5%.
On the Sunshine Coast – another Council which became
notorious for being difficult to deal with and consumed with red tape and
pointless administrative process – the pro growth and pro business candidate
Mark Jamieson (33%) scored more than double his nearest two rivals, each on
17%.
In Ipswich, popular Mayor Paul Pisasale increased his
majority, with almost 88% of the primary Mayoral vote. You would be hard
pressed to find a more passionate, pro-growth and pro-development Mayor than
Pissale, especially when it comes to his beloved Ipswich. This is a man who
proudly proclaimed that he welcomed development and developers to his city.
In Cairns, another region fast developing a reputation for an
economy strangled in anti-development red and green tape and excessive planning
controls, prominent local business identity and pro growth candidate Bob
Manning picked up 56% of the primary vote, well ahead of his nearest rival, the
incumbent Val Schier on 20%.
The South Brisbane by-election result adds weight to the
argument that this is part of a widespread and deep seated mood for
change. Labor, in what is billed as a
stronghold inner city seat, expected some solid bounce back as South Brisbane
voters were encouraged not to give the LNP another seat in Parliament. They
didn’t listen to the party line, and only one in three (33%) put the new Labor
candidate Jackie Trad first. By contrast
38% of South Brisbane voters put LNP candidate Clem Grehan first. Labor had to
survive on the preferences of the green vote, which drew 19.4% of the primary
vote in that seat.
Now take these most recent results and put them back to back
with what happened in the state election just over a month ago. The LNP picked
up a staggering 50% of the primary vote state wide, giving them 78 of the 89
seats. Labor picked up just over one in four primary votes, at 26%. The Greens
only picked up 7.5% - less than their result in the previous election. The
Greens in fact were outpolled by Katter’s ‘Australia Party’ which scored 11.5%
of primary votes state wide. (I’m not sure whether to describe Katter’s party
as pro growth but its connections to pro development rural interests suggests
it is).
That state election was a clear cut choice between a ‘Can
Do’ Campbell Newman and a Labor machine which ran heavily on anti-development
messages in its campaign, alleging that an LNP Government would be hostage to
developers and hostile to the environment. There was no confusion in voter’s
minds when they rejected the latter and firmly chose the former. You don’t get
much more pro-growth than a candidate and a party which uses ‘Can Do’ as its
rallying cry.
The point of all this is that the new political mandate for
growth shouldn’t be dismissed as some isolated reaction to the past
government’s failings. The community seem to be making their views clear: bring
back growth, bring back economic prosperity, restore the state’s balance sheet
and with it, restore some health to personal balance sheets. The anti-growth
movement will never be silenced by majority views but hopefully in this clear
message from the people, it will take a backseat and keep a low profile, for a
while at least.
For Labor, aligning itself with anti-growth movements might
prove even more damaging in the long run. Average workers on average wages left
the Labor Party in Queensland in no doubt they were on the nose. It’s not just
an issue of a damaged brand, and much more than a failed campaign strategy. If
Labor stands in people’s minds as a party which objects to progress, which
imposes punitive taxation on even humble endeavours, which is responsible for
excessive intrusion of regulation into people’s lives, and which is hostage to
fringe interest groups in a bid to win preference deals, it may be left in a political
wilderness for a long time to come. Labor’s reconnection to working families and
their values and interests is as surely the key to the revival of their
fortunes, just as John Howard achieved and as Campbell Newman and a host of
newly elected Mayors in Queensland have proven.
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