Elections were held in the Australian state of Queensland on 13 June 1998 to elect the 89 members of the state's Legislative Assembly. The result of the election was a second consecutive hung parliament, with the Labor Party forming minority government after receiving the support of independent Peter Wellington. This election was the first in which One Nation supporters were elected to state Parliament, with the controversial party winning 11 seats. With nearly 23% of the vote, One Nation gained a higher percentage of the vote than any other third party at the state or territory level since Federation. This was also the only election at which a third party gained more votes than both the Liberal Party and the National Party considered separately. Unlike in previous elections, no attempt was made to calculate the statewide two-party preferred vote, because the One Nation vote was so high that any 2PP result would have been meaningless. A few months after the election, the One Nation member for Mulgrave, Charles Rappolt resigned. Labor won the ensuing by-election, allowing it to form government with a bare majority of 45 seats. The fact that the Coalition Government came to office as a direct result of the 1996 Mundingburra by-election instead of the general election the previous year, as well as its failure to win in its own right at the 1998 election, meant that the 1998 election was the fourth consecutive election victory for the Queensland Branch of the ALP, which had won every election since 1989.
Background
The previous state election had resulted in one of the narrowest margins of any Australian election. The Coalition won a slim majority of the two-party vote. However, the Coalition's majority was wasted on massive landslides in its rural heartland, while Labor won 31 seats in Brisbane. Labor Premier Wayne Goss' government thus clung to life by a single seat. This was brought undone when the Court of Disputed Returns ordered a new election in the disputed seat of Mundingburra, which the Liberals won on a modest swing. The balance of power rested with newly elected Independent MLA Liz Cunningham, who announced her support for the Coalition. Goss resigned, and Nationals leader Rob Borbidge was appointed as Premier. The Borbidge government's popularity suffered in the later part of its term due to the federal Howard government's GST plans. Seeking to create a more definite majority, Borbidge called a new election on 19 May 1998. Although early polling showed the government to be strongly competitive with Labor, led by Peter Beattie, later polls saw Labor gain a substantial lead. However, the debate between the two parties was rapidly sidelined by One Nation's emerging support. Formed in 1997 by federal Independent MP for OxleyPauline Hanson, One Nation gained significant support on a platform of economic nationalism, anti-immigration sentiments and opposition to native title. Its platform was particularly well received in the Nationals' heartland of rural Queensland; indeed, at the time the writs were dropped, there had been fears over the past two years that One Nation would sweep the Nationals out of existence. One Nation stood candidates in 79 seats, all largely political novices. The issue of preference allocations to One Nation, under Queensland's optional preferential voting system, became a major campaign issue, with eventual poor results for the Liberals attributed to opposition from many of their traditional voters over their decision not to put One Nation last on preferences. Borbidge had been well aware of the threat from One Nation. He tried to have One Nation preferenced last on Coalition how-to-vote cards. However, the national Liberal and National organisations pressured their Queensland counterparts to preference One Nation ahead of Labor. They apparently thought that One Nation's populism would peel off enough Labor voters to allow the Coalition to win another term.
Key dates
Results
One Nation won 11 seats and finished second in 23 seats. Seven of One Nation's seats would have gone to Labor had it not been for leakage of Coalition preferences; had Labor won those seats, it would have been able to form government in its own right.
Seats changing hands
¶ Results for Mundingburra based on 1996 by-election.
Members in italics did not recontest their seats.
Post-election pendulum
GOVERNMENT SEATS
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Marginal
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Mansfield
Phil Reeves
ALP
0.2%
Barron River
Lesley Clark
ALP
0.6%
Springwood
Grant Musgrove
ALP
0.6%
Mount Ommaney
Julie Attwood
ALP
1.9%
Bundaberg
Nita Cunningham
ALP
2.0% v ONP
Cairns
Desley Boyle
ALP
2.3% v ONP
Redcliffe
Ray Hollis
ALP
2.3%
Currumbin
Merri Rose
ALP
2.8%
Ipswich
David Hamill
ALP
3.4% v ONP
Mundingburra
Lindy Nelson-Carr
ALP
3.8%
Kallangur
Ken Hayward
ALP
3.9% v ONP
Murrumba
Dean Wells
ALP
5.0% v ONP
Greenslopes
Gary Fenlon
ALP
5.2%
Waterford
Tom Barton
ALP
5.2% v ONP
Nicklin
Peter Wellington
IND
5.7% v NAT
Fairly safe
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Everton
Rod Welford
ALP
6.0%
Ashgrove
Jim Fouras
ALP
6.1%
Bundamba
Bob Gibbs
ALP
6.2% v ONP
Cleveland
Darryl Briskey
ALP
6.4%
Mackay
Tim Mulherin
ALP
6.5% v ONP
Mount Gravatt
Judy Spence
ALP
7.2%
Townsville
Mike Reynolds
ALP
7.7%
Sunnybank
Stephen Robertson
ALP
8.2%
Logan
John Mickel
ALP
8.4% v ONP
Ferny Grove
Geoff Wilson
ALP
8.6%
Chatsworth
Terry Mackenroth
ALP
8.7%
Chermside
Terry Sullivan
ALP
9.0%
Rockhampton
Robert Schwarten
ALP
9.6% v ONP
Safe
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Mount Coot-tha
Wendy Edmond
ALP
10.5%
Fitzroy
Jim Pearce
ALP
10.7% v ONP
Archerfield
Karen Struthers
ALP
11.7%
Yeronga
Matt Foley
ALP
12.5%
Kurwongbah
Linda Lavarch
ALP
13.2%
Woodridge
Bill D'Arcy
ALP
13.5% v ONP
Capalaba
Jim Elder
ALP
13.7%
Kedron
Paul Braddy
ALP
14.1%
Brisbane Central
Peter Beattie
ALP
15.1%
Cook
Steve Bredhauer
ALP
15.5% v ONP
Mount Isa
Tony McGrady
ALP
15.6% v ONP
Sandgate
Gordon Nuttall
ALP
16.0%
South Brisbane
Anna Bligh
ALP
16.3%
Lytton
Paul Lucas
ALP
17.4%
Nudgee
Neil Roberts
ALP
17.4%
Bulimba
Pat Purcell
ALP
19.5%
Inala
Henry Palaszczuk
ALP
27.4%
Polling
Although the Coalition Government initially enjoyed strong levels of support subsequent to assuming office in 1996, support was quickly lost. From 1997, Labor opened a consistent, albeit narrow, lead in the polls and by 1998 Labor was enjoying a commanding lead. The Coalition was eventually disadvantaged by what was commonly deemed to be poor government performance and the rapid rise of One Nation support, which under the state's optional preferential voting, fractured the Conservative vote. The Coalition vote significantly plummeted, whilst Labor essentially withstood the swing to One Nation.