Electoral district of Redcliffe

Redcliffe
QueenslandLegislative Assembly

Redcliffe (2008—)
State or territory: Queensland
MP: Lillian van Litsenburg
Party: Labor
Namesake: Redcliffe

Redcliffe is a Queensland Legislative Assembly electoral division in Brisbane, Queensland, Australia.

The division encompasses suburbs to the north and northeast of Brisbane, including Redcliffe, Woody Point, Scarborough, Clontarf and Margate, as well as parts of Kippa-Ring. The electorate's boundary stretches to take in Moreton Island.

The seat was created in 1960 and was first held by Liberal (later National) member Jim Houghton. The seat was contested between the Liberal and National Parties until Houghton's mid-term retirement in 1979, followed by a byelection won by Liberal Terry White. White became the Liberal leader in August 1983, causing a split in the National-dominated coalition at the time. In 1989, he lost the seat to Australian Labor Party member Ray Hollis, who at one point was Speaker of the Queensland Legislative Assembly. In 2005, Hollis resigned and the Liberals' Terry Rogers, a local chartered accountant, picked up the seat in an 8.4% by-election upset. However, his tenure in the seat was short, and he lost it to current member Lillian van Litsenburg, a school teacher, in the 2006 election.

Scott Driscoll, a hign profile identity who lives in Redcliffe, will contest the next state election for the seat as the Liberal National Party of Queensland candidate.

Contents

Members for Redcliffe

Member Party Term
  Jim Houghton Independent 1960–1960
  Liberal 1960–1961
  Independent 1961–1962
  Country 1963–1975
  National Country 1975–1979
  Terry White Liberal 1979–1989
  Ray Hollis Labor 1989–2005
  Terry Rogers Liberal 2005–2006
  Lillian van Litsenburg Labor 2006–present

Election results

Queensland state election, 2009: Redcliffe[1]
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Labor Lillian van Litsenburg 12,202 43.0 -6.5
Liberal National Bill Gollan 9,727 34.3 -4.9
Independent Peter Houston 3,953 13.9 +13.9
Greens Pete Johnson 1,737 6.1 -4.3
Family First Philip Cramer 743 2.6 +2.6
Total formal votes 28,362 97.9
Informal votes 569 2.1
Turnout 28,931 90.9
Two-candidate preferred result
Labor Lillian van Litsenburg 13,943 55.6 -0.5
Liberal National Bill Gollan 11,146 44.4 +0.5
Labor hold Swing -0.5

References

External links