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Electoral district of Albert

Electoral district of Queensland, Australia


Summary

Electoral district of Queensland, Australia

FieldValue
nameAlbert
stateqld
imageQLD - Albert 2008.png
lifespan1888–1950, 1960–2017
namesakeAlbert River
area235
electors36716
electors_year2015
coordinates

|mp-party = Albert was a Legislative Assembly electorate in the state of Queensland which existed from 1887 to 1949 and 1959 to 2017.

Albert was named for the Albert River, which runs through the electorate and separates Logan City from City of Gold Coast. It was first created in a redistribution in 1887 ahead of the 1888 colonial election and continued to exist (with various boundary alterations) until 1949, when the Darlington and Southport electorates were created. In 1959, the electorate was established again. The 1971 and 1977 redistributions greatly reduced the area of the electorate and minor changes were made in 1991, including the loss of Carbrook in the north and coastal areas below Paradise Point in the south.

Its consistently changing boundaries together with its existence in a high-growth area do not provide consistent political leanings over time, although it showed more inclination towards the Labor Party over time than any other Gold Coast seat.

The last Member for Albert, Mark Boothman, was first elected in the 2012 election.

Albert was removed in the 2017 electoral redistribution, its northern part being transferred into Logan and Macalister, its centre part transferred into Coomera, and its southern part transferred into the new electorate of Theodore.

History

Historically, the Gold Coast and Logan regions were sparsely populated agricultural areas, and the Albert electorate covered the entire south-eastern corner of the state. Its representation broadly reflected the conservative leanings and rural interests of its population, and John Appel, who served in both the Second Kidston Ministry and Denham Ministry, participated in the formation of both the Queensland Farmers' Union from the rural caucus of the Liberal Party in 1915 and the subsequent Country Party in 1919.

The seat's boundaries evolved thus:

  • Prior to 1920, the seat covered the entire modern City of Gold Coast plus Beaudesert and Jimboomba.
  • At the 1920 election, it lost Beaudesert and Jimboomba to the neighbouring seat of Fassifern, and moved north to cover all of what is now Logan City.
  • At the 1932 election, it lost the Logan area, and regained Jimboomba.
  • At the 1935 election, it lost Jimboomba, and gained all of what is now Redland City, including North Stradbroke Island, from the seat of Wynnum.

It was split up in the 1949 redistribution ahead of the 1950 state election into Darlington, which included Redland, Logan, Beaudesert, Coomera, Jimboomba and Tamborine; and Southport which was limited to the Gold Coast and its hinterland. Both seats remained safe for the Country Party; Plunkett opted to contest the seat of Darlington.

At the 1960 state election, the fast-growing Southport seat was split into Albert in the north and South Coast in the south. Further urban growth pushed the seat progressively northwards.

Its boundaries, as at the 2009 election, took in mostly urban, semi-urban and industrial areas west of the Pacific Motorway extending from Mount Warren Park and Windaroo in southern Logan to Coomera and Oxenford in the outer northern Gold Coast.

Members for Albert

Main article: Electoral results for the district of Albert

First incarnation (1888–1950)MemberPartyTermSecond incarnation (1960–2017)MemberPartyTerm
Thomas Plunkett Sr.Conservative1888–1890
Ministerialist1890–1896
Robert CollinsIndependent1896–1899
Thomas Plunkett Sr.Opposition1899–1903
Liberal1903–1907
Kidstonites1907–1908
John AppelConservative1908–1909
Liberal1909–1915
Farmers' Union1915–1917
National1917–1919
Country1919–1922
United1922–1925
CPNP1925–1929
Thomas Flood PlunkettCPNP1929–1936
Country1936–1950
Cec CareyCountry1960–1969
Bill HeatleyLiberal1970–1971
Bill D'ArcyLabor1972–1974
Ivan GibbsNational1974–1989
John SzczerbanikLabor1989–1995
Bill BaumannNational1995–2001
Margaret KeechLabor2001–2012
Mark BoothmanLiberal National2012–2017

Election results

Main article: Electoral results for the district of Albert

References

References

  1. {{Cite QldElectorate
  2. Queensland Redistribution Commission. (26 May 2017). "Determination of Queensland’s Legislative Assembly Electoral Districts".
  3. In 1933, the census counted the following populations in local government areas: Coolangatta, 1,828; Southport, 4,218; Beaudesert, 4,915; Beenleigh, 2,322; Cleveland, 2,398; Coomera, 1,152; Nerang, 3,730; Tamborine, 2,673; Tingalpa, 1,812; Waterford, 1,052. In the ensuing 15 years, the region described above only gained another 10,000 people. Source: Queensland Year Book, 1949, p.42.
  4. Queensland Government Gazettes: 1909, p.553; 1915, p.1104; 1929, p.1005; 1932, p.1517; 1947, p.927; 1950; p.1182 and 1187; 1960, p.1911 and 1919. Maps in Waterson, D.B. ''Biographical register of the Queensland Parliament, 1930-1980'' Canberra: ANU Press (1982).
Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

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