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Labor claims victory in Griffith despite minor swing against party | Labor claims victory in Griffith despite minor swing against party |
(7 months later) | |
Labor is poised to retain Kevin Rudd’s former Brisbane seat of Griffith, suffering a minor swing against in a byelection that loomed as an early electoral test for the Abbott government. | |
The Liberal National Party candidate Bill Glasson refused to concede defeat on Saturday night, but admitted it would be “difficult” to win based on the results so far. The Coalition played down the likely loss, saying it was rare for governments to attract positive swings in byelections. | |
Labor’s candidate, the employment lawyer, Terri Butler, attracted 52.33% of the vote after preferences, with about two-thirds of the electoral roll counted. That represents a swing away from the ALP of 0.68%, indicating the LNP has fallen short of the 3% required for victory. | |
Glasson, a former president of the Australian Medical Association, reduced Labor’s margin by 5.5% when he ran against Rudd last September, and went into Saturday’s byelection requiring a further 3% swing to win. The byelection was triggered by Rudd’s resignation from parliament in the wake of Labor’s national defeat last year. | |
The ABC’s election analyst, Antony Green, said Labor “definitely” would win the seat. | The ABC’s election analyst, Antony Green, said Labor “definitely” would win the seat. |
Addressing jubilant supporters, Butler said the result was a strong message to the prime minister, Tony Abbott, and the Queensland premier, Campbell Newman, that “you cannot cut your way to a better Australia”. | |
“We’ve told them our communities are sick of the LNP’s cuts,” Butler said. “We have said to Tony Abbott hands off Medicare … and we have demanded the funding our schools need.” | |
Butler said she was grateful for the honour of representing Griffith and would not let voters down. | Butler said she was grateful for the honour of representing Griffith and would not let voters down. |
Butler paid tribute to Rudd, who was among the audience at the victory party, as a “fantastic local member”. She also thanked the federal opposition leader, Bill Shorten, for spending so much time on the campaign trail supporting her efforts. | |
Butler praised Glasson for the “extremely cordial” exchanges they had when they crossed paths during the “hard fought” campaign. | Butler praised Glasson for the “extremely cordial” exchanges they had when they crossed paths during the “hard fought” campaign. |
Despite being characterised as another “Labor union lawyer” in LNP campaign material, Butler said she was proud of her work with Maurice Blackburn. | |
“I know there was a smear campaign against me but I’m proud of representing working families. I’ll always be proud of representing working families.” | |
Glasson made a speech to LNP supporters in which he said it would be difficult to win the seat, but would not concede defeat on Saturday night. He said he expected the numbers to narrow in coming days. | |
Glasson said he maintained a positive attitude and had had run for election because he wanted to improve people’s lives. He saw that the carbon tax was hurting families and businesses. | |
“I still say to Mr Shorten, please, please consider supporting the abolition of the carbon tax,” Glasson said in his speech on Saturday night. | |
Glasson attracted 42.52% of primary votes, ahead of Butler (39.57%), but preference flows are likely to ensure Labor retains the seat. According to the Australian Electoral Commission’s results summary, the Greens candidate Geoff Ebbs secured a primary vote of 10.48% while Pirate Party Australia’s Melanie Thomas polled fourth in an 11-candidate field on 1.63% - beating out the Katter’s Australian Party’s 1.02%. | |
The byelection was the first electoral test for the Abbott government since the election last September. Glasson faced a tough battle: it has been nearly 100 years since a government has seized a seat from an opposition at a federal byelection. But it is also rare for a first-term government to secure a favourable swing at a byelection. | |
The federal director of the Liberal Party, Brian Loughnane, alluded to the swing to the LNP by tweeting that the result was a “great effort by Bill Glasson” and a “clear rejection of Labor and Bill Shorten’s scare campaign”. | |
But Shorten said Butler had won the seat despite facing an opponent who was “well known in the electorate after successive campaigns in a high profile seat”. | |
“Kevin Rudd was a great local member for the people of this area, he made a tremendous contribution to the nation and I am confident that record will continue with Terri Butler, as the new Member for Griffith,” Shorten said in a statement issued on Saturday night. | |
Butler, an employment lawyer, focused on linking Glasson to budget cuts pursued by Abbott and Newman. On Saturday she said voters should use the byelection to “send a message to Mr Abbott about the government we deserve”. | |
Butler’s campaign also sought to raise fears about the potential introduction of a $6 fee for bulk-billed visits to GPs, despite Abbott’s insistence that nothing was planned or being considered. The prime minister refused to categorically rule it out. | |
Glasson, whose campaign stressed his medical background and ability to be a strong and influential local member, spoke to reporters before polls closed on Saturday. “I feel a bit like Black Caviar, an outside draw, a heavy track, but like Black Caviar I feel I’ve got a big heart, a big heart for the people of Griffith,” he said. | |
Abbott visited the electorate to support Glasson twice during the official campaign period, including a business tour two days before polling day when the prime minister encouraged voters to support the LNP at the byelection to ensure the removal of the carbon tax. | |