Queensland Election 2009
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National Policy Implementation in Queensland
National Policy Implementation in Queensland: the Politics of National Competition Policy in the 1990s. Thesis re-submitted by Brett Heyward in July 2004 for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy Political Science Discipline School of Humanities James Cook University i STATEMENT OF ACCESS I, the undersigned, author of this work, understand that James Cook University will make this thesis available for use within the University Library and, via the Australian Digital Theses network, for use elsewhere. I understand that, as an unpublished work, a thesis has significant protection under the Copyright Act and; I do not wish to place any further restriction on access to this work. _________________________ ______________ Signature Date ELECTRONIC COPY I, the undersigned, the author of this work, declare that the electronic copy of this thesis provided to the James Cook University Library is an accurate copy of the print thesis submitted, within the limits of the technology available. _________________________ ______________ Signature Date Declaration I declare that this thesis is my own work and has not been submitted in any form for another degree or diploma at any university or other institution of tertiary education. In formation derived from the published work of others has been acknowledged in the text and a list of references given. …………………………………… ……………… (Date) x Table of Contents Page Abstract iv List of Tables vi List of Figures vii Abbreviations viii Chapter One - Introduction 1 Chapter Two – The Policy Environment 64 Chapter Three – The changing context of NCP Implementation in 117 Queensland Chapter Four – The National Competition Council and the 169 implementation of NCP Chapter Five – Case Study Examples 218 Chapter Six – Key Findings and Conclusion 296 Bibliography 332 Appendices Appendix 1 – Analysis of arguments presented by John 345 Quiggin ii Abstract This is a thesis that focuses on the implementation of a national policy platform – the National Competition Policy – by the Queensland Government. -
Queensland Election 2006
Parliament of Australia Department of Parliamentary Services Parliamentary Library RESEARCH BRIEF Information analysis and advice for the Parliament 16 November 2006, no. 3, 2006–07, ISSN 1832-2883 Queensland Election 2006 The Queensland election of September 2006 saw the Beattie Labor Government win a fourth term of office, continuing the longest period of ALP government in the state since 1957. The Coalition parties’ share of the vote puts them within reach of victory, but the way in which they work towards the next election—particularly in the area of policy development—will be crucial to them if they are to succeed. Scott Bennett, Politics and Public Administration Section Stephen Barber, Statistics and Mapping Section Contents Executive summary ................................................... 1 Introduction ........................................................ 2 An election is called .................................................. 2 The Government’s travails............................................ 2 The Coalition ..................................................... 4 Might the Government be defeated? ..................................... 6 Over before it started? ................................................. 6 Party prospects ...................................................... 7 The Coalition parties ................................................ 7 The Government ................................................... 8 Campaigning........................................................ 8 The Government................................................ -
SECURITIES and EXCHANGE COMMISSION Washington, D.C
FORM 18-K/A For Foreign Governments and Political Subdivisions Thereof SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION Washington, D.C. 20549 AMENDMENT NO. 3 to ANNUAL REPORT of QUEENSLAND TREASURY CORPORATION (registrant) a Statutory Corporation of THE STATE OF QUEENSLAND, AUSTRALIA (coregistrant) (names of registrants) Date of end of last fiscal year: June 30, 2011 SECURITIES REGISTERED (As of the close of the fiscal year) Amounts as to which Names of exchanges Title of Issue registration is effective on which registered Global A$ Bonds A$1,736,999,000 None (1) Medium-Term Notes US$200,000,000 None (1) (1) This Form 18-K/A is being filed voluntarily by the registrant and coregistrant. Names and address of persons authorized to receive notices and communications on behalf of the registrants from the Securities and Exchange Commission: Philip Noble Helen Gluer Chief Executive Under Treasurer of the State of Queensland Queensland Treasury Corporation Executive Building Mineral and Energy Centre, 61 Mary Street 100 George Street Brisbane, Queensland 4000 Brisbane, Queensland 4000 Australia Australia EXPLANATORY NOTE The undersigned registrants hereby amend the Annual Report filed on Form 18-K for the above-noted fiscal year by attaching hereto as Exhibit (f)(ii) an announcement entitled “Peter Costello to head Commission of Audit into state of Queensland’s finances”, as Exhibit (f)(iii) an announcement entitled “Premier announces new Ministry”, as Exhibit (f)(iv) an announcement entitled “Newman Government Ministry changes”, as Exhibit (f)(v) an announcement entitled “Treasurer acknowledges outgoing QTC Chair” and as Exhibit (f)(vi) an announcement entitled “Former Under Treasurer appointed as new QTC Chairman”. -
2009 QUEENSLAND ELECTION Analysis of Results
2009 QUEENSLAND ELECTION Analysis of Results CONTENTS Introduction ....................................................................................................1 Summary of Redistribution ...........................................................................3 Legislative Assembly Election Summary of Legislative Assembly Results............................................7 Legislative Assembly Results by Electoral District .............................. 12 Summary of Two-Party Preferred Results ........................................... 27 Regional Summaries ........................................................................... 33 By-elections 2007 - 2011..................................................................... 36 Selected Preference Distributions .............................................................. 37 Changes in Parliamentary Membership ..................................................... 39 Queensland Election Results 1947-2007 ................................................... 40 Symbols .. Nil or rounded to zero * Sitting MP in the previous parliament. Notes indicate where an MP is contesting a different electorate. .... 'Ghost' candidate, where a party contesting the previous election did not nominate for the current election. Party Abbreviations ALP Australian Labor Party DEM Australian Democrats DLP Democratic Labor Party DSQ Daylight Saving for South East Queensland FFP Family First IND Independents GRN The Greens LIB Liberal Party LNP Liberal National Party NAT The Nationals ONP One Nation -
Candidate Details (In Ballot Paper Order) 2006 State General Election
2006 State General Election held on 09/09/2006 Candidate Details (in Ballot Paper order) Electoral District Albert Candidate: PETTINATO, Marella THE GREENS Contact Person: Marella Pettinato Ph (B): (07) 5630 1191 PO Box 109 Ph (AH): (07) 5630 1191 BROADBEACH QLD 4218 Candidate: KEECH, Margaret AUSTRALIAN LABOR PARTY Contact Person: Margaret Majella Keech Ph (B): (07) 3807 0809 PO Box 577 Fax: (07) 3807 6296 BEENLEIGH QLD 4207 Email: [email protected] Candidate: WOODROW, Karen LIBERAL PARTY Mob: 0409 041 393 Candidate: EATON, Jonathan FAMILY FIRST PARTY Contact Person: Jonathan Mark Eaton Mob: 0423 017 744 PO Box 5222 Email: [email protected] EAGLEBY QLD 4207 Electoral District Algester Candidate: CROCKER, Gary THE GREENS Mob: 0408 003 853 Email: [email protected] Candidate: TAN, William LIBERAL PARTY Contact Person: William Wee Liat Tan Mob: 0414 367 711 4 Dakar Road Fax: (07) 3711 6150 ALGESTER QLD 4115 Email: [email protected] Candidate: STRUTHERS, Karen AUSTRALIAN LABOR PARTY Ph (B): (07) 3216 6389 Fax: (07) 3216 6143 Email: [email protected] Electoral District Ashgrove Candidate: KIDDLE, Glenn LIBERAL PARTY Contact Person: Glenn Phillip Kiddle Mob: 0420 218 060 46 Grange Road Email: [email protected] GRANGE QLD 4051 Candidate: LOVE, Dean THE GREENS Contact Person: Dean Love Mob: 0405 843 826 10 Teale Street Email: [email protected] ASHGROVE QLD 4060 Candidate: JONES, Kate AUSTRALIAN LABOR PARTY Contact Person: Kate Jones Ph (B): (07) 3352 7996 PO Box 2 Ph (AH): (07) -
Thursday, 20 May 2004
20 May 2004 Legislative Assembly 1291 THURSDAY, 20 MAY 2004 Legislative Assembly Mr SPEAKER (Hon. R.K. Hollis, Redcliffe) read prayers and took the chair at 9.30 a.m. PRIVILEGE Member for Darling Downs Hon. R.E. SCHWARTEN (Rockhampton—ALP) (Minister for Public Works, Housing and Racing) (9.31 a.m.): I rise on a matter of privilege. The shadow spokesperson for public works, housing and racing, Mr Hopper, has recently penned letters to a variety of regional newspapers. I table a copy of one of these from the Sunshine Coast Daily on Monday, 17 May. The honourable member states that I have decided that 'we cannot afford to keep the Beattie Labor government's election promises despite them having been made just a few months ago'. This is a deliberate falsehood. It has no semblance of truth whatsoever and represents an attempt by the inadequate shadow minister to make himself relevant. I have already indicated in this House and outside that all building promises made at the last election have been costed and will be delivered. That was the case at the election and it is the case now. Queenslanders deserve proper policy debate from the opposition, not this sort of puerile and grubby performance. PRIVILEGE Attorney-General Mr SPRINGBORG (Southern Downs—NPA) (Leader of the Opposition) (9.32 a.m.): Mr Speaker— Mr Hopper interjected. Mr SPEAKER: Order! I point out to the member for Darling Downs that his leader is on his feet. Mr SPRINGBORG: I rise on a matter of privilege. We are not prepared to sit back and let the Premier mislead the people of Queensland. -
2015 Queensland State Election: an Overview
RESEARCH PAPER SERIES, 2015–16 17 SEPTEMBER 2015 2015 Queensland state election: an overview Dr Joy McCann and Simon Speldewinde Politics and Public Administration Section Executive summary • This paper provides an overview of the issues and outcomes for the January 2015 election for the Queensland Legislative Assembly. Where appropriate, it draws on the Library’s earlier publication on the 2012 Queensland state election.1 • The 2015 Queensland state election result surprised many observers with the dramatic shift in the fortunes of the two major parties. The Australian Labor Party (ALP), having lost government at the 2012 election and retaining just seven seats, emerged with 44 of the 89 seats with a swing of 10.8 per cent. The Liberal National Party (LNP), which had won a record majority of 78 of the 89 seats at the 2012 state election, experienced a swing of 8.3 per cent against it with its seats reduced to 42. Of the remaining seats, two were won by Katter’s Australian Party and one by Independent Peter Wellington. • The election outcome was initially unclear when it was revealed that a Palmer United Party candidate was ineligible as a result of being an undischarged bankrupt. Electoral Commission Queensland (ECQ) indicated that it would refer the Ferny Grove election result to the Court of Disputed Returns but subsequently decided not to proceed based on legal advice, paving the way for the ALP to form minority government with the support of an Independent. • Several key issues emerged during the election campaign including political financing, privatisation and asset sales, the impact of mining on the Great Barrier Reef and anti-association laws. -
Electoral and Other Legislation Amendment Bill 2015
Electoral and Other Legislation Amendment Bill 2015 Report No. 1, 2015 Legal Affairs and Community Safety Committee May 2015 Legal Affairs and Community Safety Committee Chair Mr Mark Furner MP, Member for Ferny Grove Deputy Chair Mrs Tarnya Smith MP, Member for Mount Ommaney Members Mr Jon Krause MP, Member for Beaudesert Mr Jim Madden MP, Member for Ipswich West Mr Tony Perrett MP, Member for Gympie Mr Rick Williams MP, Member for Pumicestone Staff Ms Bernice Watson, Research Director Mr Gregory Thomson, Principal Research Officer Mrs Kelli Longworth, Principal Research Officer Ms Stephanie Cash, Executive Assistant Ms Dianne Christian, Executive Assistant Technical Scrutiny Ms Renée Easten, Research Director Secretariat Mr Michael Gorringe, Principal Research Officer Ms Kellie Moule, Principal Research Officer (part-time) Ms Tamara Vitale, Executive Assistant Contact details Legal Affairs and Community Safety Committee Parliament House George Street Brisbane Qld 4000 Telephone +61 7 3406 7307 Fax +61 7 3406 7070 Email [email protected] Web www.parliament.qld.gov.au/lacsc Acknowledgements The Committee acknowledges the assistance provided by the Department of Justice and Attorney- General and the Electoral Commission of Queensland. Electoral and Other Legislation Amendment Bill 2015 Contents Abbreviations iv Chair’s foreword v Recommendations vi 1. Introduction 1 1.1 Role of the Committee 1 1.2 Inquiry process 1 1.3 Policy objectives of the Electoral and Other Legislation Amendment Bill 2015 1 Objective of the Bill 1 Other objectives 2 Reasons for the Bill 2 1.4 Background 2 1.5 Consultation on the Bill 3 1.6 Outcome of Committee deliberations 3 2. -
Ap2 Final 16.2.17
PALASZCZUK’S SECOND YEAR AN OVERVIEW OF 2016 ANN SCOTT HOWARD GUILLE ROGER SCOTT with cartoons by SEAN LEAHY Foreword This publication1 is the fifth in a series of Queensland political chronicles published by the TJRyan Foundation since 2012. The first two focussed on Parliament.2 They were written after the Liberal National Party had won a landslide victory and the Australian Labor Party was left with a tiny minority, led by Annastacia Palaszczuk. The third, Queensland 2014: Political Battleground,3 published in January 2015, was completed shortly before the LNP lost office in January 2015. In it we used military metaphors and the language which typified the final year of the Newman Government. The fourth, Palaszczuk’s First Year: a Political Juggling Act,4 covered the first year of the ALP minority government. The book had a cartoon by Sean Leahy on its cover which used circus metaphors to portray 2015 as a year of political balancing acts. It focussed on a single year, starting with the accession to power of the Palaszczuk Government in mid-February 2015. Given the parochial focus of our books we draw on a limited range of sources. The TJRyan Foundation website provides a repository for online sources including our own Research Reports on a range of Queensland policy areas, and papers catalogued by policy topic, as well as Queensland political history.5 A number of these reports give the historical background to the current study, particularly the anthology of contributions The Newman Years: Rise, Decline and Fall.6 Electronic links have been provided to open online sources, notably the ABC News, Brisbane Times, The Guardian, and The Conversation. -
UEENSLAND Polit EFORM GROUP
t Submission No: . L8. UEENSLAND POLiT EFORM GROUP hOUSESTANDINGOF p[p~(( ‘~x~..~; ~, 0738162120 Noel Turner LJ~GA±ANDAPPAJRSCONS P0 Box 563 Booval 4304 Submission ofcorrespondence copies as evidence of activity relating to: •:~ The shredding of the Heiner documents by the authority of the Queensland Government Executive on 23.3.1990, and the following cover-up to date ~• The Lindeberg Grievance submitted by the late MrRobert Greenwood QC This material is circulated to: •~ The H.ouse ofRepresentatives Standing Committee on Legal and Constitutional Afairs; “Crime in the Community” (Secretary Gillian Gould •~ The Australian Senate Select Committee on the Lindeberg Grievance (Secretary Alistair Sands ~• Professor Bruce Grundy, Department ofJournalism and Communications, University of Queensland, St Lucia, Brisbane. This material is organised in six (6) small folios covering the period from March 1996 (1993) to 1998. Each folio covers an initiative by us ( members of the Queensland Political Reform Group QPRG), and related responses to our initiatives, also supporting extracts of publications and public statements. The OPRG has as its objective , sound and just to all parties resolution of the events leading to the shredding of the Ileiner Inquiry Documents in Queensland on 23 -03 — 1990, and the following and continuing cover-up, and to have this conducted as a lawful and constitutional exercise by Queensland and AustralianPublic Institutions. ) Arrangement ofthe documents, and what they reveal 1. The first folio, docs 1 — 4 , show that OPRG was stating/supporting our view that only a specifically constituted Commission of Inquiry could competently examine the circumstances of the shredding of the Heiner Inquiry Documents, the following cover-up and political denials. -
QUEENSLAND January to June 2001
552 Political Chronicles QUEENSLAND January to June 2001 JOHN WANNA and TRACEY ARKLAY School of Politics and Public Policy, Griffith University Playing Smart Politics with a Divided Opposition On 23 January, after embarking on a three week "listening tour" around the state's shopping centres, jumping on public transport and swimming with sharks, the Premier Peter Beattie called an early election for 17 February 2001 — with six months of his first term remaining. The campaign ran for 26 days, the shortest permissible under the Electoral Act. The catalyst for the snap poll was the damage to Beattie's government caused by the "electoral rorts" scandal involving mainly the powerful Australian Workers' Union faction. While the initial allegations of electoral fraud had involved pre-selection battles in two Townsville seats, the repercussions were much wider engulfing the entire party and bringing down the Deputy Premier Jim Elder and two backbenchers, Grant Musgrove and Mike Kaiser. However, Beattie's political opponents were divided and Labor benefitted from a four-way split among the conservative side of politics and some other conservative independents. From the outset of the campaign, Beattie attempted to present his team as "clean" and free of rorters. He argued that the evidence to the Shepherdson inquiry (see previous Queensland Political Chronicle) demonstrated that the rorters were "just a tiny cell of people acting alone, and they have resigned or been expelled, and I don't believe anyone else is involved" (Courier-Mail, 17 January 2001). As the campaign commenced, it became clear that Labor's campaign was not just organised around the Premier; Beattie was Labor's campaign. -
We Are the Influence in Our Nation
We are the influence in our Nation Step 1: Identify your arena. Q: Is your issue (or campaign) a Local, State or Federal issue? LOCAL: Residential roads (generally 40/60klms), Small issues affecting some or all neighbours and/or locals' parking enforcment, local services, animals, Sunshine Coast Council neighbours, housing, refuse, rates etc. Website STATE: Roads connecting councils (generally 60/80klms), health, Education, POLICE & law enforcement, justice, agriculture, environment, Queensland Government Big Issues affecting all Queenslanders' natural resources, water and energy; Website communities, child protection & disabilities; tourism & events; etc. FEDERAL: Highways connecting States (generally 100klms), Health, Education, justice, Bigger issues affecting all Australians' Marriage, the 'Right to Life', freedoms, Federal Government immigration, defence, ecconomy, constitutional Website matters, etc. Step 2: Define your hero. Who is best placed, and most responsible for your issue? Consolidate your message. Keep your letter/email precise and concise. Always try to greet, compliment, raise and then Step 3: reconcile or offer thoughts towards an amicable solution. (letters are more effective than emails. Postal addresses can be found by clicking on the name of the person that you wish to make contact with) Deploy and follow up. Send your email or post your letter. However note, often it can take several attempts to get a response from a campaign or action. If you are not satisfied with their response or efforts, always follow them up and don't be afraid to Step 4: redeploy a letter – referring to your previous correspondence or attempts – keep calm – be respectful – but be fearless. Seek redefinition, further clarification or depth, don't be appeased until you have achieved a response that relieves the reasons that warranted your action.