Division of Bowman
Bowman Australian House of Representatives Division | |
---|---|
Division of Bowman in Queensland, as of the 2016 federal election. | |
Created | 1949 |
MP | Andrew Laming |
Party | Liberal National |
Namesake | David Bowman |
Electors | 103,551 (2016) |
Area | 537 km2 (207.3 sq mi) |
Demographic | Outer Metropolitan |
The Division of Bowman is an Australian Electoral Division in Queensland. The division was created in 1949 and is named for David Bowman, an early leader of the Australian Labor Party, in Queensland. The seat consists of the entirety of Redland City, located in the eastern suburbs of Brisbane, and includes the suburbs of Capalaba, Cleveland, Redland Bay, Birkdale, Thorneside, Alexandra Hills, Thornlands, Mount Cotton, Ormiston, Wellington Point and Victoria Point. The division also incorporates various islands of Moreton Bay including Coochiemudlo Island, the inhabited southern Bay Islands (Russell, Karragarra, Macleay and Lamb) and the big tourist destination of North Stradbroke Island.
It is generally a residential electorate with some crops, poultry, various light industries and tourism.
Bowman has traditionally been a highly marginal seat, regularly changing hands between the Australian Labor Party and the Liberal Party. Notably, the electorate has been won by the party with the largest national two party preferred vote at every election from 1954 to 2001 (except 1990). However, in the 2004 election, an energetic campaign by Dr Andrew Laming, and an electoral redistribution (due to the creation of the new Division of Bonner, leading veteran Bowman MP Con Sciacca to contest this new seat), saw Bowman returned to the Liberal Party by a significant margin (59.12% 2PP). The division was then considered by pollsters such as Antony Green to be a fairly safe Liberal seat.
In the 2007 election, the electorate experienced a strong swing of 8.86% towards the Australian Labor Party; the incumbent Laming held the seat by 0.04%, or 64 votes. This made it second only to McEwen as the most marginal seat in the country, although the 2009 electoral redistribution in Queensland saw the margin notionally reduced further, to effectively 0.005%, making Bowman Australia's most marginal seat at the time.[1] Laming went on to retain the seat comfortably for the Liberal National Party of Queensland in: 2010, regaining ground with a 9.51% swing towards him; 2013, despite a 6.35% swing against him; and 2016, when all parties saw a positive swing in Bowman (for the first time since 1955), due to the absence of a Palmer United Party candidate.
Members
Member | Party | Term | |
---|---|---|---|
Malcolm McColm | Liberal | 1949–1961 | |
Jack Comber | Labor | 1961–1963 | |
Wylie Gibbs | Liberal | 1963–1969 | |
Len Keogh | Labor | 1969–1975 | |
David Jull | Liberal | 1975–1983 | |
Len Keogh | Labor | 1983–1987 | |
Con Sciacca | Labor | 1987–1996 | |
Andrea West | Liberal | 1996–1998 | |
Con Sciacca | Labor | 1998–2004 | |
Andrew Laming | Liberal | 2004–2010 | |
Liberal National | 2010–present |
Election results
Party | Candidate | Votes | % | ± | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Liberal National | Andrew Laming | 45,946 | 49.77 | +0.49 | |
Labor | Kim Richards | 29,592 | 32.05 | +2.17 | |
Greens | Brad Scott | 9,012 | 9.76 | +3.78 | |
Family First | Brett Saunders | 4,459 | 4.83 | +2.68 | |
Liberty Alliance | Tony Duncan | 3,316 | 3.59 | +3.59 | |
Total formal votes | 92,325 | 96.19 | +0.70 | ||
Informal votes | 3,654 | 3.81 | −0.70 | ||
Turnout | 95,979 | 92.69 | −2.23 | ||
Two-party-preferred result | |||||
Liberal National | Andrew Laming | 52,690 | 57.07 | −1.79 | |
Labor | Kim Richards | 39,635 | 42.93 | +1.79 | |
Liberal National hold | Swing | −1.79 | |||
References
- ↑ Hurst, Brian: Time is running out in ALP in Bowman, Bayside Bulletin, 1 February 2010.
- ↑ Bowman, QLD, Virtual Tally Room 2016, Australian Electoral Commission.
External links
Coordinates: 27°34′48″S 153°14′31″E / 27.580°S 153.242°E