1988 Groom by-election
A by-election was held for the Australian House of Representatives seat of Groom on 9 April 1988. This was triggered by the resignation of National Party MP Tom McVeigh.
The election was won by Liberal Party candidate Bill Taylor.
Taylor was publicly backed by former Queensland premier Sir Joh Bjelke-Petersen a month before the poll. Bjelke-Petersen, who had been forced to resign as premier several months earlier after losing the support of his National Party colleagues, said the Nationals had lost their way and turned their backs on traditional conservative policies.[1]
Candidates
- Australian Democrats – Mark Carew, the party's 1987 candidate.
- Australian Labor Party – Linda Dwyer, the party's 1987 candidate.
- Liberal Party of Australia – Bill Taylor, an officer in the Royal Australian Navy.
- National Party of Australia – David Russell.
- Independent – Peter Consandine, republican campaigner who later founded the Republican Party of Australia.
- Independent – Vincent Burke. Burke later contested the Australian Senate as an ungrouped independent in 1990.
Results
Party | Candidate | Votes | % | ± | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Liberal | Bill Taylor | 20,651 | 33.3 | +19.9 | |
National | David Russell | 17,814 | 28.8 | -20.1 | |
Labor | Linda Dwyer | 14,973 | 24.2 | -8.2 | |
Independent | Vincent Burke | 4,661 | 7.5 | +7.5 | |
Democrats | Mark Carew | 3,474 | 5.6 | +0.2 | |
Independent | Peter Consandine | 369 | 0.6 | +0.6 | |
Total formal votes | 61,942 | 98.6 | |||
Informal votes | 889 | 1.4 | |||
Turnout | 62,831 | 88.0 | |||
Two-party-preferred result | |||||
Liberal | Bill Taylor | 38,651 | 62.4 | +62.4 | |
National | David Russell | 23,271 | 37.6 | -25.2 | |
Liberal gain from National | Swing | N/A |
gollark: Warning: do not stick sensitive items, body parts, or honestly literally anything in the gap.
gollark: Or, for short distances, boost the voltage dangerously high and it can just *arc* across the gap!
gollark: Beam data across with radio (or for ultimate coolness, lasers), and power with... also radio?, or just don't send power along and expect the other side to be plugged in.
gollark: It's... technically possible.
gollark: Idea: wireless USB cables.
References
- "Vote for Libs, says Joh, the Nats are lost", The Courier-Mail, 15 March 1988, pg 2.
- "By-Elections 1987-1990". Psephos.
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