Stafford byelection tipped to swing towards LNP as danger looms for Steven Miles’ leadership of Queensland Labor
The Guardian World ·

A byelection in the Brisbane seat of Stafford is expected to swing towards the sitting LNP Queensland government in a result experts say would likely be fatal to former premier Steven Miles’ …
A byelection in the Brisbane seat of Stafford is expected to swing towards the sitting LNP Queensland government in a result experts say would likely be fatal to former premier Steven Miles’ leadership of the Labor party. Voters in the northern Brisbane electorate of Stafford have gone to the polls after the sudden death of former independent MP Jimmy Sullivan in April. If Queensland Labor loses the seat, it would be the first state party in 50 years to lose a byelection to the government from opposition, heaping pressure on Miles. Sullivan – who had a 6.83% swing against him in the 2024 election – was expelled from the Labor party in May 2025 over legal and medical concerns. Sign up for the Breaking News Australia email He was expelled from Labor in 2025 after taking a months-long leave of absence and then coming under repeated personal attack by the government in parliament. Stafford – a historically working class suburb in north Brisbane – has been almost continuously held by Labor since 1989. From 2001 to 2006 it was held by Sullivan’s father, Terry Sullivan. With a margin of 5.3%, it was the 12th-closest Labor seat at the 2024 election and is considered marginal. The Greens’ how-to-vote card did not recommend its voters preference either Labor or Liberal National parties, unlike in 2024. One Nation did not stand a candidate. …
Original source: The Guardian World