Queensland July to December 2023

IF 0.6 4区 社会学 Q1 HISTORY
Paul D. Williams
{"title":"Queensland July to December 2023","authors":"Paul D. Williams","doi":"10.1111/ajph.12983","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"<p>The period was politically grim for the Labor Government and no brighter economically for Queenslanders. Inflation posed the toughest challenge for Cabinet, followed by youth crime, housing and health. Infrastructure cost blowouts also caused the government and Premier Annastacia Palaszczuk enormous public opinion pain leading, in turn, to a rare change in Labor leadership with Palaszczuk's shock resignation and the accession of Steven Miles. The period also saw Queensland record the nation's lowest ‘Yes’ vote in the First Nations Voice to Parliament referendum, with dreams of a post-referendum treaty now quashed.</p><p>The cost of living remained arguably the most pressing crisis confronting the Palaszczuk Labor Government. Annual inflation in Brisbane registered 6.3 per cent by mid-year (down from 7.4 per cent the previous quarter), with the September and December quarters registering significant improvements to 5.2 per cent and 4.2 per cent respectively. But, as the economy cooled, so too did employment: joblessness rose from 4.1 per cent in July to 4.4 per cent in December (https://www.qgso.qld.gov.au/). Inflation figures, however, masked devilish details, including a 25 per cent rise in the cost of Brisbane electricity (<i>Courier Mail</i> 27 July, 2023), and a 20 per cent surge in many supermarket staples (<i>Courier Mail</i> 26 October, 2023).</p><p>It was also reported that Queensland's population was growing faster than any other Australian state or territory: another 2.2 million people would call southeast Queensland home by 2046 (<i>Courier Mail</i> 20 August, 2023). Infrastructure therefore remained a buzzword, especially after cost blowouts in numerous projects caused both economic and political headaches. The Department of Transport revealed in July, for example, that the 65 trains commissioned to be built in Maryborough, originally costed as $7.1 billion, would now cost $9.5 billion (<i>Courier Mail</i> 14 July, 2023). Transport Minister Mark Bailey, initially claiming he did not recall when he discovered the $2.4 billion increase, later conceded he knew before the issue of a media release that expediently omitted the new information. It was later revealed the increase had been approved by Cabinet's Budget Review Committee on 16 May, or eight weeks before the blowout was uncovered (<i>Courier Mail</i> 15 August, 2023).</p><p>Premier Annastacia Palaszczuk initially blamed a “sick media adviser working from home”, and later ordered an inquiry (<i>Courier Mail</i> 8 August, 16 August, 2023). A review by John McKenna QC subsequently found political staffers in Bailey's office did not “direct” public servants to alter the media release, but merely offered “a couple of things to consider” (<i>Courier Mail</i> 22 August, 2023). Labor's embarrassment was compounded when it was revealed the Department of Transport had spent $17 million on external consultants despite the recent Coaldrake Report into the Public Service warning against such engagements (<i>Australian</i> 8 August, 2023). But cost was not the only drag on infrastructure. Work on Queensland's largest project, Brisbane's $6.3 billion Cross River Rail (CCR), was halted when unions protested the 331 safety warnings CCR had been issued (<i>Courier Mail</i> 27 July, 2023).</p><p>The powerful Queensland Resources Council sector continued its war with the Palaszczuk Government over dramatically increased coal royalty rates (see previous Chronicles). Interestingly, a July Freshwater Strategy poll found 46 per cent of voters supported a reduced coal royalty regime – with 28 per cent supporting the status quo – despite higher royalties providing Queensland's most recent budget surplus (<i>AFR</i> 6 July, 2023). After Treasurer Cameron Dick threatened to seize BHP's mining leases should the company cease its Queensland investments, BHP Chief Executive Mike Henry reiterated his company would not make any new “greenfield” investments in Queensland (<i>Australian</i> 22 August, 2023). Interestingly, opposition leader David Crisafulli refused to confirm the LNP's own coal royalty policy (<i>Australian</i> 14 September, 2023).</p><p>The Labor Government could offer some good news, however, via a $50 million support package that would keep a copper smelter and refinery open in north Queensland till 2030 despite Glencore's closure of three copper mines around Mount Isa by 2025 (<i>AFR</i> 19 October, 2023). Importantly, the Palaszczuk Government remained committed to its $5 billion CopperString transmission line connecting Mount Isa to Townsville, with cynics suggesting the guarantee was a pre-emptive strike should Labor require the support of the three Katter's Australian Party (KAP) MPs after the next state election (<i>Courier Mail</i> 31 October, 2023). No state or federal government enticements, however, could keep US company Tritrium, a manufacturer of “fast chargers”, from closing its Brisbane operations with the loss of 200 jobs (<i>AFR</i> 10 November, 2023).</p><p>Environmental concerns remained in the policy spotlight, especially after reports of alarming tree-clearing rates from the Burnett to Cape York; up to 47 per cent of all tree-clearing between 2015 and 2021 occurred in this region (<i>Australian</i> 4 September, 2023). Yet the state was on track to meet its carbon emissions target – a 30 per cent reduction below 2005 levels – by 2024 (<i>Brisbane Times</i> 18 September, 2023). Part of that success would be found in the Premier's announcement that state-owned energy company CS Energy had purchased a 50 per cent share in the Boulder Creek wind farm in central Queensland – a key element of the Government's $62 billion clean energy plan (<i>AFR</i> 5 October, 2023). In late October, the Palaszczuk Government's renewable energy target was increased to 80 per cent by 2035 (<i>Australian</i> 25 October, 2023). Palaszczuk also flagged legislation to ensure the public ownership of most power stations and all poles and wires (<i>Courier Mail</i> 24 October, 2023). The government then announced that Rio Tinto and Japan's Sumitomo Corporation will invest $111 million to develop a hydrogen plant at Yarwin aluminium refinery near Gladstone – with taxpayers contributing $30 million – after Palaszczuk's trade mission to Singapore, Japan and South Korea (<i>Australian Financial Review [AFR]</i> 12 July, 2023). Palaszczuk would visit China (her fourth visit there as premier) in November.</p><p>The government's business focus continued with the announcement that Queensland companies could now bid for “tens of billions of dollars in Olympic and public sector contracts” through the new Q2023 project under an “All Queensland, All In” slogan (<i>Brisbane Times</i> 19 July, 2023). The government also won kudos for its popular Smart Energy Savers program that allowed eligible households to access rebates, of up to $1,000, when purchasing energy-efficient white goods (<i>Courier Mail</i> 2 August, 2023). A similar scheme, valued at $16 million, was announced in October for small and medium-sized businesses. Praise also came for Palaszczuk's announcement of a $50 million “Backing Business in the Bush” fund to assist regional business find export markets (<i>Courier Mail</i> 18 August, 2023). The Liberal-National Party (LNP) opposition, however, complained that Labor was investing $26 million less on business innovation than just four years ago (<i>Courier Mail</i> 29 October, 2023).</p><p>By contrast, the Premier was lauded for her announcement of $76 million in funding to roll out quantum technology in schools and TAFE colleges (<i>Brisbane Times</i> 4 October, 2023). But not all education news was rosy: the recruitment of around 6,600 teachers and teacher aides was “barely bridging the gap” created by teacher resignation rates of up to 9.2 per cent (<i>Courier Mail</i> 17 October, 2023). Palaszczuk also revealed that, in addressing future water security, her government would abandon plans for water recycling and instead build the state's second desalination plant, at a cost of $8 billion, north of Brisbane. Cabinet appeared divided over the issue, with Water Minister Glenn Butcher reportedly endorsing recycling (<i>Courier Mail</i> 10 October, 2023).</p><p>As so often during Queensland's summers, natural disasters burdened the state economy. Intense bushfires across 59 sites saw firefighters brought in from interstate, and from Canada and New Zealand. In early December, Category Two Cyclone Jasper swept across far north Queensland while, over the Christmas period, severe thunderstorms killed eight people and brought widespread flooding and protracted power outages across the southeast, with the Gold Coast particularly hard hit. Some, including Gold Coast Mayor Tom Tate, criticised the Bureau of Meteorology for an alleged “failure” to forecast the storms' severity (<i>Australian</i> 28 December, 2023).</p><p>The period also saw some old-fashioned Queensland parochialism as the Palaszczuk Government aggressively confronted the federal Albanese Government – the Premier called on Albanese “to do what's right” – after federal Infrastructure Minister Catherine King announced a new 50:50 Commonwealth-State infrastructure funding arrangement that (after earlier stripping $7.4 billion from the states and territories) would put at risk another $14 billion in Queensland projects (<i>Brisbane Times</i> 14 November, 2023; <i>AFR</i> 29 November, 2023). Nonetheless, Palaszczuk recommitted $107 million to fund the Inland Freight Route (<i>Courier Mail</i> 28 November, 2023).</p><p>Youth crime was another serious challenge for the Palaszczuk Government. It was reported in July, for example, that more than 85 per cent of Queensland's “most serious young criminals” – numbering 449 in 2023 compared to just 374 in 2022 – had re-offended within 12 months (<i>Courier Mail</i> 21 July, 2023). Other statistics confirmed the trend: Queensland, having a seen a 15 per cent increase in a single year, was now recording more victims of crime than any other state (<i>Courier Mail</i> 1 August, 2023). With reports that young offenders were brazenly confronting rather than running from police, pressure mounted on Police Commissioner Katarina Carroll, with Police Minister Mark Ryan demanding the courts “do their job” (<i>Courier Mail</i> 25 July, 2023). Indeed, an October YouGov poll found 76 per cent of Queenslanders had beefed up home security, with around 20 per cent now declaring they felt “mostly or very unsafe” in their own homes (<i>Courier Mail</i> 28 October, 2023). Despite the government earlier passing what it deemed the “toughest laws in the nation” (see previous Chronicle), victims of crime declared the new laws weak before marching on Parliament House, with Palaszczuk pilloried for failing to address protestors (<i>Courier Mail</i> 23 August, 2023). Yet the Premier found rebuke from the other side, too, when former Court of Appeal president Margaret McMurdo, Queensland Human Rights Commissioner Scott McDougall and the Queensland Council of Social Service condemned legislation which appeared to override human rights in holding young offenders indefinitely in watch-houses (<i>Courier Mail</i> 28 August, 2023). In the face of that criticism, Cabinet in early September approved a new parliamentary committee, chaired by Independent MP Sandy Bolton (Noosa), to advise on youth crime (<i>Brisbane Times</i> 12 September, 2023). The government also pledged an additional $200 million over five years for victims of crime, and another $250 million to build the state's third children's detention centre (<i>Brisbane Times</i> 28 September; 5 October 2023). But Labor's image was hardly enhanced when Thuringowa MP Aaron Harper addressed yet another victims group which he labelled an LNP “rent-a-crowd” (<i>Courier Mail</i> 31 October, 2023). Harper later apologised. In December, it was announced Townsville would receive its own Polair helicopter before it was reported that 120 police had resigned from the service in the previous five months (<i>Courier Mail</i> 22 December, 2023).</p><p>The national housing crisis remained a third challenge for Queensland. In July, it was reported that 300,000 Queenslanders had “unmet” housing needs, with the government completing just five per cent of its promised social housing – a $5 billion project unlikely to be completed until 2027 (<i>Courier Mail</i> 1 July, 2023). It was also revealed that almost 100,000 undeveloped blocks of land – including around 60,000 in southeast Queensland – were sitting idle (<i>Courier Mail</i> 26 August, 2023). In response, the government introduced legislation to cut “red tape” and empower the Minister for Planning to expeditiously approve developments. The government also doubled the First Homebuyers' Grant to $30,000 for properties valued up to $750,000 (<i>Brisbane Times</i> 19 November, 2023).</p><p>Health remained a fourth crisis. Health Minister Shannon Fentiman, for example, reported hospital “ramping” times at some hospitals had blown out to more than 10 hours (<i>Courier Mail</i> 26 July, 2023). The Department's reputation was hardly enhanced when it was revealed that maternity staff shortages were worsening across regional hospitals. September also saw reports that 36 Queensland hospitals employed fewer doctors and nurses than in 2005 (<i>Courier Mail</i> 24 September, 2023). The government was also criticised for labelling outer-suburban medical centres “satellite hospitals” after hundreds of patients with “immediately life-threatening” injuries attended the centres seeking care. To mitigate, Queensland Health spent $1.35 million on an advertising campaign to avoid “confusion” (<i>Courier Mail</i> 14 November; 16 November, 2023). Once again, Opposition leader Crisafulli refused to detail how many health workers his government would employ (<i>Courier Mail</i> 28 November, 2023).</p><p>Public opinion support for both the government and the premier continued to decline during the period. A May–August Resolve Strategic poll, for example, pegged Labor's primary vote at 32 per cent, and the LNP's at 38 per cent, for a two-party-preferred (2PP) total of 48 to 52 in the LNP's favour. When an August–September Redbridge poll measured Labor's primary vote of just 26 per cent (and 41 per cent for the LNP), and a 2PP of 45 to 55 in the LNP's favour, factional leaders and affiliated trade unions commenced machinations for a leadership change (see below). An early October YouGov poll – taken after Palaszczuk had quashed an early round of leadership rumblings – found an increase in Labor's vote to 33 per cent (41 per cent for the LNP) for a 2PP total of 48 to 52 in the LNP's favour. A September–December Resolve Strategic poll found even better results for Labor, now on 33 per cent primary vote (37 per cent for the LNP) for a much closer 2PP split of 49.5 to 50.5 per cent in the LNP's favour. But, despite an improving Labor vote, Palaszczuk's personal approval ratings continued to decline, with factional and trade union wheels finally moving to replace her with Deputy Premier Steven Miles in early December. A uComms poll taken immediately after Palaszczuk's shock resignation on 10 December revealed a small improvement in Labor's primary vote to 34 per cent (38 per cent for the LNP) for a 2PP total of 48 to 52 in the LNP's favour. A subsequent uComms poll – the first under new premier Steven Miles – now measured Labor's primary vote at 34.4 (and the LNP's at 36.2) for a 2PP total of 49 to 51 per cent in the LNP's favour.</p><p>Preferred leadership ratings told a similar story. Palaszczuk led LNP leader Crisafulli as preferred premier until the June–July Freshwater Strategy poll found just 44 per cent of voters preferring Palaszczuk, and 45 per cent Crisafulli. The September–December Resolve Strategic poll found Palaszczuk preferred by just 34 per cent, and Crisafulli by 39 per cent. Critically, a December uComms poll saw new premier Miles preferred by 47.8 per cent, and Crisafulli by 52.2 per cent. But leadership satisfaction ratings painted a bleaker Labor picture. Where the May–August Resolve Strategic poll saw Palaszczuk suffer a net approval rating of minus 15 points (and a net plus 11 for Crisafulli), by early October a YouGov poll had recorded a 20-point net deficit in Palaszczuk's satisfaction rating, and a nine-point net positive for Crisafulli. Interestingly, the December uComms found new premier Miles enjoyed a net positive rating of 12.5 points. A <i>Courier Mail</i> poll confirmed Labor's woes in terms of policy management, however, with 32 per cent citing Crisafulli more capable in tackling the cost of living, and just 21 per cent Palaszczuk. Similarly, 37 per cent believed the LNP superior managers of youth crime, and just 14 per cent Labor (<i>Courier Mail</i> 27 October, 2023). The major parties' fundraising mirrored their fortunes: where the LNP raised over $750,000 between July 2022 and May 2023, Labor raised just $167,000, including from so-called “cash-for-access” events previously banned by Palaszczuk (<i>Australian</i> 10 July, 2023).</p><p>Few observers believed Queensland would return a majority vote at the Voice to Parliament referendum, held on 14 October, designed to recognise First Nations peoples in the Australian Constitution by establishing an Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander advisory body. But most were stunned by the enormity of Queensland's rejection. Recording the largest ‘No’ vote of any state or territory, Queensland saw just 31.79 per cent of the state's 3,178,373 formal votes endorse the ‘Yes’ case. Queensland also recorded the third-lowest turnout.</p><p>As outlined below, just three of Queensland 30 federal seats – Brisbane, Griffith and Ryan (all held by the Greens since 2022) – voted ‘Yes’.\n\n </p><p>Devastated by the defeat, Palaszczuk immediately reaffirmed her government would continue to develop a treaty, as previously legislated, with First Nations people (<i>Courier Mail</i> 16 October, 2023). But, just days later, Opposition leader David Crisafulli withdrew his party's previously pledged support. Describing the referendum as a “divisive” event, Crisafulli was likely pressured by a conservative rank-and-file LNP membership opposed to further First Nations reconciliation (<i>Australian</i> 19 October, 2023). The following day, Palaszczuk shocked many when she, too, withdrew support for a treaty, arguing that such issues require “bipartisan support” (<i>Australian</i> 20 October, 2023). Interestingly, a <i>Courier Mail</i> opinion poll found support for a treaty, or a “truth-telling” commission, had collapsed in Queensland since the referendum's defeat, falling from 58 per cent in October to just 33 per cent in November (<i>Brisbane Times</i> 19 November, 2023).</p><p>Queensland lost two political giants during the period. On 11 August, former Nationals Premier Mike Ahern (1987–89) – long respected for his “lock, stock and barrel” embrace of the Fitzgerald Report's post-Bjelke-Petersen anti-corruption recommendations – died aged 81. On 21 October, Bill Hayden, a former Queensland Labor federal MP (Oxley, 1961–88), federal opposition leader (1977–83) and Governor-General (1989–96), also passed, aged 90. Each man was afforded a state funeral.</p>","PeriodicalId":45431,"journal":{"name":"Australian Journal of Politics and History","volume":"70 2","pages":"358-366"},"PeriodicalIF":0.6000,"publicationDate":"2024-04-22","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/epdf/10.1111/ajph.12983","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Australian Journal of Politics and History","FirstCategoryId":"98","ListUrlMain":"https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/ajph.12983","RegionNum":4,"RegionCategory":"社会学","ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q1","JCRName":"HISTORY","Score":null,"Total":0}
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Abstract

The period was politically grim for the Labor Government and no brighter economically for Queenslanders. Inflation posed the toughest challenge for Cabinet, followed by youth crime, housing and health. Infrastructure cost blowouts also caused the government and Premier Annastacia Palaszczuk enormous public opinion pain leading, in turn, to a rare change in Labor leadership with Palaszczuk's shock resignation and the accession of Steven Miles. The period also saw Queensland record the nation's lowest ‘Yes’ vote in the First Nations Voice to Parliament referendum, with dreams of a post-referendum treaty now quashed.

The cost of living remained arguably the most pressing crisis confronting the Palaszczuk Labor Government. Annual inflation in Brisbane registered 6.3 per cent by mid-year (down from 7.4 per cent the previous quarter), with the September and December quarters registering significant improvements to 5.2 per cent and 4.2 per cent respectively. But, as the economy cooled, so too did employment: joblessness rose from 4.1 per cent in July to 4.4 per cent in December (https://www.qgso.qld.gov.au/). Inflation figures, however, masked devilish details, including a 25 per cent rise in the cost of Brisbane electricity (Courier Mail 27 July, 2023), and a 20 per cent surge in many supermarket staples (Courier Mail 26 October, 2023).

It was also reported that Queensland's population was growing faster than any other Australian state or territory: another 2.2 million people would call southeast Queensland home by 2046 (Courier Mail 20 August, 2023). Infrastructure therefore remained a buzzword, especially after cost blowouts in numerous projects caused both economic and political headaches. The Department of Transport revealed in July, for example, that the 65 trains commissioned to be built in Maryborough, originally costed as $7.1 billion, would now cost $9.5 billion (Courier Mail 14 July, 2023). Transport Minister Mark Bailey, initially claiming he did not recall when he discovered the $2.4 billion increase, later conceded he knew before the issue of a media release that expediently omitted the new information. It was later revealed the increase had been approved by Cabinet's Budget Review Committee on 16 May, or eight weeks before the blowout was uncovered (Courier Mail 15 August, 2023).

Premier Annastacia Palaszczuk initially blamed a “sick media adviser working from home”, and later ordered an inquiry (Courier Mail 8 August, 16 August, 2023). A review by John McKenna QC subsequently found political staffers in Bailey's office did not “direct” public servants to alter the media release, but merely offered “a couple of things to consider” (Courier Mail 22 August, 2023). Labor's embarrassment was compounded when it was revealed the Department of Transport had spent $17 million on external consultants despite the recent Coaldrake Report into the Public Service warning against such engagements (Australian 8 August, 2023). But cost was not the only drag on infrastructure. Work on Queensland's largest project, Brisbane's $6.3 billion Cross River Rail (CCR), was halted when unions protested the 331 safety warnings CCR had been issued (Courier Mail 27 July, 2023).

The powerful Queensland Resources Council sector continued its war with the Palaszczuk Government over dramatically increased coal royalty rates (see previous Chronicles). Interestingly, a July Freshwater Strategy poll found 46 per cent of voters supported a reduced coal royalty regime – with 28 per cent supporting the status quo – despite higher royalties providing Queensland's most recent budget surplus (AFR 6 July, 2023). After Treasurer Cameron Dick threatened to seize BHP's mining leases should the company cease its Queensland investments, BHP Chief Executive Mike Henry reiterated his company would not make any new “greenfield” investments in Queensland (Australian 22 August, 2023). Interestingly, opposition leader David Crisafulli refused to confirm the LNP's own coal royalty policy (Australian 14 September, 2023).

The Labor Government could offer some good news, however, via a $50 million support package that would keep a copper smelter and refinery open in north Queensland till 2030 despite Glencore's closure of three copper mines around Mount Isa by 2025 (AFR 19 October, 2023). Importantly, the Palaszczuk Government remained committed to its $5 billion CopperString transmission line connecting Mount Isa to Townsville, with cynics suggesting the guarantee was a pre-emptive strike should Labor require the support of the three Katter's Australian Party (KAP) MPs after the next state election (Courier Mail 31 October, 2023). No state or federal government enticements, however, could keep US company Tritrium, a manufacturer of “fast chargers”, from closing its Brisbane operations with the loss of 200 jobs (AFR 10 November, 2023).

Environmental concerns remained in the policy spotlight, especially after reports of alarming tree-clearing rates from the Burnett to Cape York; up to 47 per cent of all tree-clearing between 2015 and 2021 occurred in this region (Australian 4 September, 2023). Yet the state was on track to meet its carbon emissions target – a 30 per cent reduction below 2005 levels – by 2024 (Brisbane Times 18 September, 2023). Part of that success would be found in the Premier's announcement that state-owned energy company CS Energy had purchased a 50 per cent share in the Boulder Creek wind farm in central Queensland – a key element of the Government's $62 billion clean energy plan (AFR 5 October, 2023). In late October, the Palaszczuk Government's renewable energy target was increased to 80 per cent by 2035 (Australian 25 October, 2023). Palaszczuk also flagged legislation to ensure the public ownership of most power stations and all poles and wires (Courier Mail 24 October, 2023). The government then announced that Rio Tinto and Japan's Sumitomo Corporation will invest $111 million to develop a hydrogen plant at Yarwin aluminium refinery near Gladstone – with taxpayers contributing $30 million – after Palaszczuk's trade mission to Singapore, Japan and South Korea (Australian Financial Review [AFR] 12 July, 2023). Palaszczuk would visit China (her fourth visit there as premier) in November.

The government's business focus continued with the announcement that Queensland companies could now bid for “tens of billions of dollars in Olympic and public sector contracts” through the new Q2023 project under an “All Queensland, All In” slogan (Brisbane Times 19 July, 2023). The government also won kudos for its popular Smart Energy Savers program that allowed eligible households to access rebates, of up to $1,000, when purchasing energy-efficient white goods (Courier Mail 2 August, 2023). A similar scheme, valued at $16 million, was announced in October for small and medium-sized businesses. Praise also came for Palaszczuk's announcement of a $50 million “Backing Business in the Bush” fund to assist regional business find export markets (Courier Mail 18 August, 2023). The Liberal-National Party (LNP) opposition, however, complained that Labor was investing $26 million less on business innovation than just four years ago (Courier Mail 29 October, 2023).

By contrast, the Premier was lauded for her announcement of $76 million in funding to roll out quantum technology in schools and TAFE colleges (Brisbane Times 4 October, 2023). But not all education news was rosy: the recruitment of around 6,600 teachers and teacher aides was “barely bridging the gap” created by teacher resignation rates of up to 9.2 per cent (Courier Mail 17 October, 2023). Palaszczuk also revealed that, in addressing future water security, her government would abandon plans for water recycling and instead build the state's second desalination plant, at a cost of $8 billion, north of Brisbane. Cabinet appeared divided over the issue, with Water Minister Glenn Butcher reportedly endorsing recycling (Courier Mail 10 October, 2023).

As so often during Queensland's summers, natural disasters burdened the state economy. Intense bushfires across 59 sites saw firefighters brought in from interstate, and from Canada and New Zealand. In early December, Category Two Cyclone Jasper swept across far north Queensland while, over the Christmas period, severe thunderstorms killed eight people and brought widespread flooding and protracted power outages across the southeast, with the Gold Coast particularly hard hit. Some, including Gold Coast Mayor Tom Tate, criticised the Bureau of Meteorology for an alleged “failure” to forecast the storms' severity (Australian 28 December, 2023).

The period also saw some old-fashioned Queensland parochialism as the Palaszczuk Government aggressively confronted the federal Albanese Government – the Premier called on Albanese “to do what's right” – after federal Infrastructure Minister Catherine King announced a new 50:50 Commonwealth-State infrastructure funding arrangement that (after earlier stripping $7.4 billion from the states and territories) would put at risk another $14 billion in Queensland projects (Brisbane Times 14 November, 2023; AFR 29 November, 2023). Nonetheless, Palaszczuk recommitted $107 million to fund the Inland Freight Route (Courier Mail 28 November, 2023).

Youth crime was another serious challenge for the Palaszczuk Government. It was reported in July, for example, that more than 85 per cent of Queensland's “most serious young criminals” – numbering 449 in 2023 compared to just 374 in 2022 – had re-offended within 12 months (Courier Mail 21 July, 2023). Other statistics confirmed the trend: Queensland, having a seen a 15 per cent increase in a single year, was now recording more victims of crime than any other state (Courier Mail 1 August, 2023). With reports that young offenders were brazenly confronting rather than running from police, pressure mounted on Police Commissioner Katarina Carroll, with Police Minister Mark Ryan demanding the courts “do their job” (Courier Mail 25 July, 2023). Indeed, an October YouGov poll found 76 per cent of Queenslanders had beefed up home security, with around 20 per cent now declaring they felt “mostly or very unsafe” in their own homes (Courier Mail 28 October, 2023). Despite the government earlier passing what it deemed the “toughest laws in the nation” (see previous Chronicle), victims of crime declared the new laws weak before marching on Parliament House, with Palaszczuk pilloried for failing to address protestors (Courier Mail 23 August, 2023). Yet the Premier found rebuke from the other side, too, when former Court of Appeal president Margaret McMurdo, Queensland Human Rights Commissioner Scott McDougall and the Queensland Council of Social Service condemned legislation which appeared to override human rights in holding young offenders indefinitely in watch-houses (Courier Mail 28 August, 2023). In the face of that criticism, Cabinet in early September approved a new parliamentary committee, chaired by Independent MP Sandy Bolton (Noosa), to advise on youth crime (Brisbane Times 12 September, 2023). The government also pledged an additional $200 million over five years for victims of crime, and another $250 million to build the state's third children's detention centre (Brisbane Times 28 September; 5 October 2023). But Labor's image was hardly enhanced when Thuringowa MP Aaron Harper addressed yet another victims group which he labelled an LNP “rent-a-crowd” (Courier Mail 31 October, 2023). Harper later apologised. In December, it was announced Townsville would receive its own Polair helicopter before it was reported that 120 police had resigned from the service in the previous five months (Courier Mail 22 December, 2023).

The national housing crisis remained a third challenge for Queensland. In July, it was reported that 300,000 Queenslanders had “unmet” housing needs, with the government completing just five per cent of its promised social housing – a $5 billion project unlikely to be completed until 2027 (Courier Mail 1 July, 2023). It was also revealed that almost 100,000 undeveloped blocks of land – including around 60,000 in southeast Queensland – were sitting idle (Courier Mail 26 August, 2023). In response, the government introduced legislation to cut “red tape” and empower the Minister for Planning to expeditiously approve developments. The government also doubled the First Homebuyers' Grant to $30,000 for properties valued up to $750,000 (Brisbane Times 19 November, 2023).

Health remained a fourth crisis. Health Minister Shannon Fentiman, for example, reported hospital “ramping” times at some hospitals had blown out to more than 10 hours (Courier Mail 26 July, 2023). The Department's reputation was hardly enhanced when it was revealed that maternity staff shortages were worsening across regional hospitals. September also saw reports that 36 Queensland hospitals employed fewer doctors and nurses than in 2005 (Courier Mail 24 September, 2023). The government was also criticised for labelling outer-suburban medical centres “satellite hospitals” after hundreds of patients with “immediately life-threatening” injuries attended the centres seeking care. To mitigate, Queensland Health spent $1.35 million on an advertising campaign to avoid “confusion” (Courier Mail 14 November; 16 November, 2023). Once again, Opposition leader Crisafulli refused to detail how many health workers his government would employ (Courier Mail 28 November, 2023).

Public opinion support for both the government and the premier continued to decline during the period. A May–August Resolve Strategic poll, for example, pegged Labor's primary vote at 32 per cent, and the LNP's at 38 per cent, for a two-party-preferred (2PP) total of 48 to 52 in the LNP's favour. When an August–September Redbridge poll measured Labor's primary vote of just 26 per cent (and 41 per cent for the LNP), and a 2PP of 45 to 55 in the LNP's favour, factional leaders and affiliated trade unions commenced machinations for a leadership change (see below). An early October YouGov poll – taken after Palaszczuk had quashed an early round of leadership rumblings – found an increase in Labor's vote to 33 per cent (41 per cent for the LNP) for a 2PP total of 48 to 52 in the LNP's favour. A September–December Resolve Strategic poll found even better results for Labor, now on 33 per cent primary vote (37 per cent for the LNP) for a much closer 2PP split of 49.5 to 50.5 per cent in the LNP's favour. But, despite an improving Labor vote, Palaszczuk's personal approval ratings continued to decline, with factional and trade union wheels finally moving to replace her with Deputy Premier Steven Miles in early December. A uComms poll taken immediately after Palaszczuk's shock resignation on 10 December revealed a small improvement in Labor's primary vote to 34 per cent (38 per cent for the LNP) for a 2PP total of 48 to 52 in the LNP's favour. A subsequent uComms poll – the first under new premier Steven Miles – now measured Labor's primary vote at 34.4 (and the LNP's at 36.2) for a 2PP total of 49 to 51 per cent in the LNP's favour.

Preferred leadership ratings told a similar story. Palaszczuk led LNP leader Crisafulli as preferred premier until the June–July Freshwater Strategy poll found just 44 per cent of voters preferring Palaszczuk, and 45 per cent Crisafulli. The September–December Resolve Strategic poll found Palaszczuk preferred by just 34 per cent, and Crisafulli by 39 per cent. Critically, a December uComms poll saw new premier Miles preferred by 47.8 per cent, and Crisafulli by 52.2 per cent. But leadership satisfaction ratings painted a bleaker Labor picture. Where the May–August Resolve Strategic poll saw Palaszczuk suffer a net approval rating of minus 15 points (and a net plus 11 for Crisafulli), by early October a YouGov poll had recorded a 20-point net deficit in Palaszczuk's satisfaction rating, and a nine-point net positive for Crisafulli. Interestingly, the December uComms found new premier Miles enjoyed a net positive rating of 12.5 points. A Courier Mail poll confirmed Labor's woes in terms of policy management, however, with 32 per cent citing Crisafulli more capable in tackling the cost of living, and just 21 per cent Palaszczuk. Similarly, 37 per cent believed the LNP superior managers of youth crime, and just 14 per cent Labor (Courier Mail 27 October, 2023). The major parties' fundraising mirrored their fortunes: where the LNP raised over $750,000 between July 2022 and May 2023, Labor raised just $167,000, including from so-called “cash-for-access” events previously banned by Palaszczuk (Australian 10 July, 2023).

Few observers believed Queensland would return a majority vote at the Voice to Parliament referendum, held on 14 October, designed to recognise First Nations peoples in the Australian Constitution by establishing an Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander advisory body. But most were stunned by the enormity of Queensland's rejection. Recording the largest ‘No’ vote of any state or territory, Queensland saw just 31.79 per cent of the state's 3,178,373 formal votes endorse the ‘Yes’ case. Queensland also recorded the third-lowest turnout.

As outlined below, just three of Queensland 30 federal seats – Brisbane, Griffith and Ryan (all held by the Greens since 2022) – voted ‘Yes’.

Devastated by the defeat, Palaszczuk immediately reaffirmed her government would continue to develop a treaty, as previously legislated, with First Nations people (Courier Mail 16 October, 2023). But, just days later, Opposition leader David Crisafulli withdrew his party's previously pledged support. Describing the referendum as a “divisive” event, Crisafulli was likely pressured by a conservative rank-and-file LNP membership opposed to further First Nations reconciliation (Australian 19 October, 2023). The following day, Palaszczuk shocked many when she, too, withdrew support for a treaty, arguing that such issues require “bipartisan support” (Australian 20 October, 2023). Interestingly, a Courier Mail opinion poll found support for a treaty, or a “truth-telling” commission, had collapsed in Queensland since the referendum's defeat, falling from 58 per cent in October to just 33 per cent in November (Brisbane Times 19 November, 2023).

Queensland lost two political giants during the period. On 11 August, former Nationals Premier Mike Ahern (1987–89) – long respected for his “lock, stock and barrel” embrace of the Fitzgerald Report's post-Bjelke-Petersen anti-corruption recommendations – died aged 81. On 21 October, Bill Hayden, a former Queensland Labor federal MP (Oxley, 1961–88), federal opposition leader (1977–83) and Governor-General (1989–96), also passed, aged 90. Each man was afforded a state funeral.

昆士兰州 2023 年 7 月至 12 月
12 月 10 日帕拉斯楚克宣布辞职后,uComms 立即进行了民意调查,结果显示工党的初选得票率略有上升,为 34%(新进步党为 38%),2PP 总票数为 48 比 52,新进步党获胜。随后进行的uComms民意调查(新任总理史蒂文-迈尔斯(Steven Miles)领导下的首次民意调查)显示,工党的初选得票率为34.4%(新进步党为36.2%),2PP总计为49%对51%,新进步党获胜。在6-7月的淡水战略民意调查(Freshwater Strategy poll)中,只有44%的选民支持帕拉斯楚克,45%的选民支持克里萨弗利。9 月至 12 月的 Resolve Strategic 民意调查发现,仅有 34% 的人支持帕拉斯茨楚克,39% 的人支持克里斯萨弗利。至关重要的是,12 月的 uComms 民意调查显示,新总理迈尔斯的支持率为 47.8%,而克里萨弗利的支持率为 52.2%。但工党领导层的满意度却不容乐观。在 5-8 月份的 Resolve Strategic 民意调查中,帕拉斯楚克的支持率净值为负 15 个百分点(而克里萨弗利的支持率净值为正 11 个百分点),而在 10 月初的 YouGov 民意调查中,帕拉斯楚克的满意度净值为负 20 个百分点,而克里萨弗利的满意度净值为正 9 个百分点。有趣的是,12月份的uComms调查发现,新任总理迈尔斯的净支持率为12.5个百分点。然而,《信使邮报》的一项民意调查证实了工党在政策管理方面的困境,32%的人认为克里斯法利更有能力解决生活成本问题,而认为帕拉斯楚克更有能力解决生活成本问题的人仅占21%。同样,37% 的人认为新进步党在管理青少年犯罪方面更胜一筹,而工党的这一比例仅为 14%(《信使邮报》2023 年 10 月 27 日)。各主要政党的筹款情况也反映了他们的命运:在 2022 年 7 月至 2023 年 5 月期间,新进步党筹集了超过 75 万美元,而工党仅筹集了 16.7 万美元,其中包括帕拉什丘克之前禁止的所谓 "现金获取 "活动(《澳大利亚人报》,2023 年 7 月 10 日)。很少有观察家认为昆士兰会在 10 月 14 日举行的 "议会之声 "公投中获得多数票,该公投旨在通过建立土著居民和托雷斯海峡岛民咨询机构,在澳大利亚宪法中承认原住民。但大多数人都对昆士兰州拒绝公投的严重程度感到震惊。昆士兰州的 "反对 "票是所有州或领地中最多的,在该州 3178373 张正式选票中,只有 31.79% 的人支持 "赞成 "案。如下文所述,在昆士兰 30 个联邦席位中,只有布里斯班、格里菲斯和瑞安(自 2022 年以来均由绿党占据)三个席位投了 "赞成 "票。 帕拉斯楚克对这次失败感到非常沮丧,她立即重申政府将继续按照之前的立法与原住民制定条约(《信使邮报》,2023 年 10 月 16 日)。但是,仅仅几天后,反对党领袖大卫-克里萨弗利(David Crisafulli)就撤回了该党之前承诺的支持。克里萨弗利将公投描述为 "分裂性 "事件,他很可能是受到了反对进一步与原住民和解的保守派国民党党员的压力(《澳大利亚人报》,2023 年 10 月 19 日)。第二天,帕拉斯楚克也撤回了对条约的支持,她认为此类问题需要 "两党支持",这让许多人感到震惊(《澳大利亚人报》,2023 年 10 月 20 日)。有趣的是,《信使邮报》的一项民意调查发现,自公投失败以来,昆士兰州对条约或 "真相调查 "委员会的支持率直线下降,从 10 月份的 58% 降至 11 月份的 33%(《布里斯班时报》,2023 年 11 月 19 日)。8 月 11 日,前国民党总理迈克-埃亨(Mike Ahern,1987-89 年)去世,享年 81 岁,他因 "坚定不移地 "接受菲茨杰拉德报告(Fitzgerald Report)中比耶尔克-彼得森(Bjelke-Petersen)之后的反腐败建议而长期受到尊敬。10 月 21 日,前昆士兰工党联邦议员(奥克斯利,1961-88 年)、联邦反对党领袖(1977-83 年)和总督(1989-96 年)比尔-海登也去世了,享年 90 岁。每个人都举行了国葬。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
0.60
自引率
12.50%
发文量
59
期刊介绍: The Australian Journal of Politics and History presents papers addressing significant problems of general interest to those working in the fields of history, political studies and international affairs. Articles explore the politics and history of Australia and modern Europe, intellectual history, political history, and the history of political thought. The journal also publishes articles in the fields of international politics, Australian foreign policy, and Australia relations with the countries of the Asia-Pacific region.
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