Current track

Title

Artist

Background

‘Out of touch’: Election warning after Qld blow

Written by on October 27, 2024

The Greens have been warned voters have “buyers remorse” following a bruising Queensland state election defeat, with fears patterns could continue into next year’s federal election and allow Labor to win back three key seats.

Despite boasts to claim 10 seats from Labor, the Greens stand to lose the electorate of South Brisbane to Labor’s Barbara O’Shea.

The Greens’ second seat, Brisbane electorate Maiwar, is being projected by the ABC to record a 5.2 per cent swing to the LNP, however more counting is needed to determine whether it will be held by current MP Michael Berkman.

Federally, the Greens have consistently attacked Labor over its handling of the conflict in the Middle East and have withheld support and blocked the government’s key housing legislation, including Labor’s shared-equity Help to Buy scheme.

However Senior Labor minister Murray Watt said Saturday’s result should serve as a warning ahead of the federal election, and said there was a “real sense of buyer’s remorse”.

“People voted for the Greens, both at state and federal level, expecting to see progressive solutions delivered, and all they’ve ended up getting is a bunch of blockers and extreme activists who seem increasingly out of touch with what voters in those areas think,” Senator Watt told Sky News on Sunday.

He said it gave Labor hope that it could unseat the Greens from the three inner-city Brisbane seats of Griffith, which is held by outspoken housing spokesperson Max Chandler-Mather, Brisbane, which is held by Stephen Bates and Ryan (Elizabeth Watson-Brown).

All three seats were won by the minor party from either Labor or the LNP in the 2022 federal election.

“We’ve had a lot of feedback that people really noticed Max Chandler-Mather on stage with the CFMEU, pursuing an extreme sort of agenda there,” said Senator Watt.

“They’re obviously trying to whip up anger and anxiety in the community over Palestine and constantly blocking Labor when we try to deliver progressive reform on things like housing and even creating an Environmental Protection Agency.

“I think people are starting to see through the Greens here in Queensland.”

However, Brisbane-based Greens MP for Griffith Max Chandler-Mather told the ABC

“We’ve seen progress, we’ve seen Labor adopt much of our policy platforms because they know it’s popular,” he said.

Read related topics:Brisbane