The Gold Coast Bulletin

STUCK IN FIRST GEAR

LNP caught short by MP’s resignatio­n while Labor ‘knew for months’

- PAUL WESTON paul.weston@news.com.au

THE State Government was tipped off in October that long-serving MP Jann Stuckey would pull the pin on Currumbin in the new year – but LNP party members ignored warnings.

An LNP source said members were warned “in June or July’’ that she wouldn’t see out her term but thought they could “get her over the line”.

Ms Stuckey announced on Wednesday she had depression, and would quit on February 1.

THE State Government gained a five-month headstart on Jann Stuckey’s future in Currumbin after it was tipped off in October that the longservin­g MP would pull the pin in the new year.

The Gold Coast Bulletin has learnt that Labor parachuted in respected candidate Kaylee Campradt and now – even in a by-election, where government­s are traditiona­lly belted – could win the marginal Gold Coast seat.

In a stunning day in politics yesterday, the Bulletin also discovered:

The Government has yet to decide a date for a by-election but in a bid to save costs and get as many voters as possible to reduce the protest vote, Premier Annastacia Palaszczuk will consider a Currumbin by-election on the day of the Gold Coast City Council poll, March 28.

The LNP is still weeks away from naming a candidate after Ms Stuckey caught the party by surprise by sending out a statement on Wednesday night announcing she will quit on February 1.

●High-profile candidates such as footballer Ben Hannant or retired top cop Jim Keogh are unlikely to be backed as arguments continue about whether a male or female should stand.

●LNP leader Deb Frecklingt­on accused Labor of targeting Ms Stuckey in Parliament late last year.

“Jann Stuckey was telling people in the electorate, in the school community, that she would pull the pin in January,” a Labor source told the Bulletin.

“That’s why we’ve been quite active. Kaylee Campradt has had her truck (with advertisin­g) out and around since December.”

An LNP Coast source said party members were warned as early as June last year that Ms Stuckey would not see out her term of office but ignored the informatio­n.

“Probably about June or July they warned she would be going. They had the understand­ing they would try to get her over the line. It was foolhardy,” the LNP source said.

To win the next election in October the LNP believes it must defeat Labor’s Meaghan Scanlon in Gaven, where Labor won by 378 votes in 2017, a margin of 3.5 per cent.

But Ms Stuckey’s statement on Wednesday night that she would retire nine months earlier than expected after battling depression enables Labor to have two seats on the Glitter Strip or at least retain one if Ms Scanlon loses.

“We have a decent candidate,” an LNP source said about Currumbin. “It (an announceme­nt) will be in the next week or so. We will be ready. It will be hard fought and we will get a swing, being a good indicator for a state election in October.”

But another party source was less convinced: “There is every possibilit­y we will lose.”

Labor held the seat of Currumbin from 1992 to 2004, but Ms Stuckey has been the MP ever since despite sustaining swings of up to 15 per cent. She won the 2017 election with a 3.3 per cent margin.

Labor holds government with a narrow majority and is facing a battle in regional and northern Queensland.

Griffith University political lecturer Dr Paul Williams believes the challenge for the LNP is less about getting a highprofil­e candidate but the margin, which will be low enough to “get Labor to want to try”.

He said it was rare for a government to steal a seat from an opposition in a by-election.

If the swing against the Government was above 5 per cent it would be a good sign for the LNP but Dr Williams suggested it could be as low as 1 per cent, leaving the Government a winner heading into a state poll.

“The real political capital is going to be wrapped up in the size of swing,” he said. “Annastacia Palaszczuk is not sweating. Deb Frecklingt­on is sweating. Labor does not need to win that seat to score a big political point. Deb Frecklingt­on needs to win the seat and with a big swing to them, and that is probably unlikely.”

The LNP source said: “If the by-election is in March, you haven’t time to build a profile. The Labor candidate down there hit the ground running two months ago, they have been straight out of the starting blocks. They have a big billboard with her on the side of a truck saying ‘Creating jobs for Queensland’.”

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