The election was triggered when a number of Liberal MLAs, including Welfare Services Minister Terry White, crossed the floor of the Parliament in order to support a Labor motion to create an Expenditure Review Committee. White was sacked from cabinet for supporting the motion. In response, he launched a party-room coup against Liberal leader and deputy premierLlewellyn Edwards and became Liberal leader with Angus Innes as his deputy. In the normal course of events, White would have succeeded Edwards as deputy premier. However, White and Innes' progressive leanings didn't sit well with Bjelke-Petersen, and he refused to make White deputy premier. In response, White tore up the Coalition agreement and led the Liberals to the crossbench. However, Bjelke-Petersen prorogued Parliament ahead of the election, allowing him to govern for nine weeks without fear of being toppled on the floor of the legislature. Labor, under the leadership of new leader Keith Wright, hoped to make use of the division between the conservative parties to make gains, while the Liberals hoped to win enough seats to force the Nationals back into Coalition under more favourable terms. The Nationals sought to gain enough seats to form a majority government in their own right. Indeed, Bjelke-Petersen directed his campaign mainly at right-leaning Liberal voters, suggesting that the alternative was a Labor government propped up by White's Liberals.
Key dates
Results
The Nationals were returned to office, one seat short of a majority. Labor also made gains, although not enough to challenge Bjelke-Petersen's continued dominance. The Liberals were decimated, falling from 22 seats to a rump of eight seats. Of the Liberals who crossed the floor, only White and Innes were reelected.
Seats changing hands
Members in italics did not recontest their seats.
Bob Moore was elected as a Liberal in the previous election, but changed to the National party in 1983.
Post-election pendulum
NATIONAL SEATS
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-
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Marginal
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-
-
Maryborough
Gilbert Alison
NAT
0.03%
Pine Rivers
Yvonne Chapman
NAT
0.4%
Barron River
Martin Tenni
NAT
3.2%
Caboolture
Bill Newton
NAT
3.3%
Toowoomba North
Sandy McPhie
NAT
3.6%
Redlands
John Goleby
NAT
4.0%
Greenslopes
Leisha Harvey
NAT
4.3%
Flinders
Bob Katter
NAT
5.2%
Toowong
Earle Bailey
NAT
5.2%
Fairly safe
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-
-
Mansfield
Bill Kaus
NAT
6.1%
Hinchinbrook
Ted Row
NAT
6.2%
Albert
Ivan Gibbs
NAT
6.5%
Fassifern
Kev Lingard
NAT
6.5%
Whitsunday
Geoff Muntz
NAT
6.5%
Mirani
Jim Randell
NAT
6.6%
Burdekin
Mark Stoneman
NAT
6.7%
Isis
Lin Powell
NAT
7.1%
Mulgrave
Max Menzel
NAT
7.5%
South Coast
Russ Hinze
NAT
7.5%
Warrego
Neil Turner
NAT
7.7%
Mount Gravatt
Ian Henderson
NAT
7.9%
Safe
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-
-
Toowoomba South
John Warner
NAT
10.0%
Aspley
Brian Cahill
NAT
10.4%
Peak Downs
Vince Lester
NAT
10.4%
Somerset
Bill Gunn
NAT
11.0%
Cooroora
Gordon Simpson
NAT
12.1%
Gregory
Bill Glasson
NAT
12.8%
Landsborough
Mike Ahern
NAT
13.9%
Southport
Doug Jennings
NAT
13.9%
Carnarvon
Peter McKechnie
NAT
14.3%
Gympie
Len Stephan
NAT
14.5%
Roma
Russell Cooper
NAT
15.5%
Burnett
Claude Wharton
NAT
16.1%
Surfers Paradise
Rob Borbidge
NAT
17.4%
Warwick
Des Booth
NAT
17.9%
Auburn
Neville Harper
NAT
23.3%
Condamine
Brian Littleproud
NAT
23.8%
Lockyer
Tony Fitzgerald
NAT
24.1%
Balonne
Don Neal
NAT
24.4%
Barambah
Joh Bjelke-Petersen
NAT
28.5%
Cunningham
Tony Elliott
NAT
28.7%
Aftermath
After the election, Bjelke-Petersen openly invited Liberal MLAs to defect to the Nationals. On 25 October, two Liberal MLAs, Brian Austin and Don Lane took up Bjelke-Petersen's offer and joined the Nationals. This gave them 43 seats, a majority of two—the first time that the Nationals had governed in majority at any level in Australia. This left only six Liberals, and marked the end of Terry White's leadership and Angus Innes' deputy leadership. Former leader Sir William Knox was returned to lead what remained of the party. Labor had performed well, but not well enough, especially in North Queensland. Still, Labor strategists hoped that they had recovered enough seats to put them within striking distance of winning in 1986.