Electoral district of Bulimba

Coordinates: 27°28′S 153°5′E / 27.467°S 153.083°E / -27.467; 153.083
Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

Bulimba
Labor
NamesakeBulimba
Electors39,571 (2020)
Area29 km2 (11.2 sq mi)
DemographicInner-metropolitan
Coordinates27°28′S 153°5′E / 27.467°S 153.083°E / -27.467; 153.083
Electorates around Bulimba:
McConnel Clayfield Clayfield
South Brisbane Bulimba Lytton
Greenslopes Chatsworth Chatsworth
2008 map of Bulimba

Bulimba is an

electoral district of the Legislative Assembly in the Australian state of Queensland
.

The electorate covers the inner eastern suburbs of Brisbane. It is bounded on the north and the west by the Brisbane River and, as at the 2009 election, covers the suburbs of Bulimba, Balmoral, Cannon Hill, Hawthorne, Morningside, Norman Park, Murarrie and Seven Hills. The boundaries have changed relatively little since 1923; prior to that, the boundaries extended as far east as Wynnum and as far south-east as Mount Gravatt and Cleveland.[1]

History

Bulimba has existed continuously since the 1873 election, originally covering most of the outer south-east of Brisbane.

Since the 1923 redistribution, Bulimba has strongly supported Labor. The

Labor Party (ALP) held the seat on all but six terms and, of those, 3 were held by an independent Labor candidate and one by a member of the Queensland Labor Party. As a measure of how strongly pro-Labor the seat has been, it was one of the eleven seats Labor retained in the Coalition landslide of 1974
, at which Labor was cut down to a "cricket team" of only 11 members.

In the

, for one term.

Although ALP candidate

Robert Gardner was elected in Bulimba in the 1950 election, the close result caused close scrutiny of the votes and revealed that fraudulent votes had been cast in Gardner's favour. The election was ruled void, but Gardner himself was cleared of any involvement in the fraud.[2][3] The scandal and the investigations into the fraud continued for many months. Finally, a by-election was held on 14 April 1951 (almost 12 months after the original election) with the ballot boxes under police guard.[4] Gardner won the by-election by a narrow margin.[5]

Prior to the 1957 election, Gardner and 21 other Labor MLAs under the leadership of Premier Vince Gair left the ALP to form the Queensland Labor Party (QLP). Gardner was defeated by Jack Houston of the regular ALP, who held the seat until 1980 and was the state's Opposition Leader from 1966 until 1974.

In the 2012 election, Liberal National candidate Aaron Dillaway was elected. In the 2015 election, Bulimba was the most marginal seat held by the LNP and was regained by Di Farmer of the ALP.

Members for Bulimba

Member Party Term
  William Hemmant   1873–1876
  James Johnston   1876
  George Grimes   1876–1878
  Frederick Swanwick   1878–1882
  John Francis Buckland Liberal 1882–1892
  James Dickson
Independent
1892–1896
  Ministerial 1896–1901
  Walter Barnes Ministerial 1901–1903
  Conservative 1903–1909
  Liberal 1909–1915
  Hugh McMinn
Labor
1915–1918
  Walter Barnes National 1918–1922
United
1922–1923
  Harry Wright
Labor
1923–1929
  Irene Longman Country and Progressive National 1929–1932
  William Copley
Labor
1932–1938
  George Marriott
Labor
1938–1941
  Independent Labor 1941–1950
  Bob Gardner
Labor
1950–1957
  Queensland Labor 1957
  Jack Houston
Labor
1957–1980
  Ron McLean
Labor
1980–1992
  Pat Purcell
Labor
1992–2009
  Di Farmer
Labor
2009–2012
  Aaron Dillaway Liberal National 2012–2015
  Di Farmer
Labor
2015–present

Election results

2020 Queensland state election: Bulimba[6]
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Labor Di Farmer 16,764 48.23 −0.64
Liberal National Anthony Bishop 11,883 34.19 −0.35
Greens Rolf Kuelsen 4,665 13.42 +0.30
One Nation Doug Conway 785 2.26 +2.26
Independent Finn Armstrong-Schmakeit 659 1.90 +1.90
Total formal votes 34,756 98.10 +1.53
Informal votes 673 1.90 −1.53
Turnout 35,429 89.53 +1.70
Two-party-preferred result
Labor Di Farmer 21,336 61.39 +0.61
Liberal National Anthony Bishop 13,420 38.61 −0.61
Labor hold Swing +0.61

References

  1. Queensland Parliament. Archived from the original
    (PDF) on 27 April 2020. Retrieved 27 April 2020.
  2. ^ "KEEN VOTES WATCH". The Courier-Mail. Brisbane: National Library of Australia. 4 January 1951. p. 3. Retrieved 29 March 2014.
  3. ^ "BULIMBA FRAUD". The Courier-Mail. Brisbane: National Library of Australia. 31 January 1951. p. 1. Retrieved 29 March 2014.
  4. ^ "Election count continues". The Courier-Mail. Brisbane: National Library of Australia. 16 April 1951. p. 3. Retrieved 29 March 2014.
  5. ^ "BULIMBA MAJORITY STANDS TO END". The Courier-Mail. Brisbane: National Library of Australia. 21 April 1951. p. 5. Retrieved 29 March 2014.
  6. ^ 2020 State General Election – Bulimba – District Summary, ECQ.

Further reading

External links