Electoral district of Clayfield

Clayfield
QueenslandLegislative Assembly

Clayfield (2008—)
State or territory: Queensland
MP: Tim Nicholls
Party: Liberal National
Namesake: Clayfield

Clayfield is an electoral division of the Queensland Legislative Assembly. It is centred around the inner northern suburb of Clayfield in the state capital of Brisbane.

The seat was first created in 1950, and consistently returned members for the conservative Liberal Party until its abolition in 1977. It was recreated in 1992 as part of the electoral reforms that ended Bjelke-Petersen-era malapportionment, and was easily won by Liberal candidate Santo Santoro, later a Borbidge government minister. Santoro was re-elected in 1996 and 1998, but was defeated in a shock result in 2001 by actress and Labor candidate Liddy Clark. Clark held on to the normally safe Liberal seat for two terms, but after a controversy-scarred term as a minister, was defeated by Liberal candidate Tim Nicholls in 2006. Nicholls has been the deputy leader of the state Liberal Party since November 2007.

A redistribution in 2008 made Clayfield notionally Labor by 0.2%, but the Liberal National Party achieved a swing strong enough for Nicholls to retain this seat in the 2009 election.

Contents

Members for Clayfield

First incarnation (1950–1977)
Member Party Term
  Harold Taylor Liberal 1950–1963
  John Murray Liberal 1963–1976
  Ivan Brown Liberal 1976–1977
Second incarnation (1992–present)
Member Party Term
  Santo Santoro Liberal 1992–2001
  Liddy Clark Labor 2001–2006
  Tim Nicholls Liberal 2006–2008
  Liberal National 2008–present

Election results

Queensland state election, 2009: Clayfield[1]
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Liberal National Tim Nicholls 13,784 49.2 +5.1
Labor Joff Lelliott 10,230 36.5 -4.7
Greens Andrew Jeremijenko 2,988 10.7 -0.1
DS4SEQ Randle Thomas 560 2.0 +2.0
Family First Brendan Wong 433 1.5 +1.5
Total formal votes 27,995 98.5
Informal votes 384 1.5
Turnout 28,379 91.2
Two-candidate preferred result
Liberal National Tim Nicholls 14,738 55.8 +6.1
Labor Joff Lelliott 11,656 44.2 -6.1
Liberal National gain from Labor Swing +6.1

References

External links