KAP 13.1% vs LNP
Incumbent MP
Bob Katter, since 1993. Previously state member for Flinders 1974-1992.
Geography
Far North Queensland and northwestern Queensland. Kennedy covers a large part of Queensland’s land mass, stretching from the Queensland coast between Cairns and Townsville (although containing neither, and stretching inland to the Northern Territory boundary, covering the inland towns of Mount Isa and Charters Towers. Other major towns include Innisfail, Ingham, Tully, Mareeba and Gordonvale.
History
Kennedy is an original federation electorate. It was mainly held by the ALP until 1966, and since then it has mainly been held by members of the Katter family, first for the Country/National Party and latterly as an independent and KAP member.
The seat was first won in 1901 by Charles McDonald of the ALP in 1901. McDonald was elected as the first Labor Speaker in 1910 when the ALP won a majority in Parliament for the first time, and served in the role for the entirety of the Labor governments of 1910-1913 and 1914-1917, although he went to the backbench when the Labor government split over conscription in 1917. He held the seat until his death in 1925.
Nationalist candidate Grosvenor Francis won Kennedy at the 1925 election unopposed following McDonald’s death. Francis won re-election in 1928 but lost Kennedy to the ALP’s Darby Riordan.
Riordan held Kennedy until his death in 1936, when he was succeeded by his nephew Bill Riordan. Riordan held the seat for thirty years, and retired in 1966.
The 1966 election saw Kennedy won by the Country Party’s Bob Katter Sr. Katter was a former member of the ALP who left the party in 1957 when the Queensland Labor Party split from the federal party, and ended up in the Country Party. He briefly served as a minister in the McMahon government for ten months in 1972 before the election of the Whitlam government.
Katter Sr died in 1990 shortly before the federal election, and the seat was won by the ALP’s Rob Hulls, who ran a business in Mount Isa. Hulls held the seat for one term, losing to Bob Katter Jr, a former state MP, at the 1993 election. Hulls moved to Victoria and was elected to the Victorian state parliament in 1996. Rob Hulls went on to serve as a minister in the Bracks government and as Deputy Premier in the Brumby government.
Katter Jr was a strong supporter of Joh Bjelke-Petersen’s state government, and found himself at odds with the federal Liberal/National coalition. He resigned from the Nationals in 2001 and easily won re-election as an independent in 2001, and at the next three elections.
Following the 2010 federal election, Katter found himself sharing the balance of power with fellow independents. He broke with fellow independents in refusing to support a minority Labor government.
In 2011, Bob Katter founded a minor party led by himself, named Katter’s Australian Party (KAP). Katter has continued to represent Kennedy as a KAP member since then.
Assessment
Kennedy is a safe seat for Bob Katter.
Candidate | Party | Votes | % | Swing |
Bob Katter | Katter’s Australian Party | 39,036 | 41.7 | +0.7 |
Bryce Macdonald | Liberal National | 26,387 | 28.2 | +0.7 |
Jason Brandon | Labor | 15,033 | 16.1 | -0.9 |
Jennifer Cox | Greens | 6,013 | 6.4 | +1.3 |
Peter Campion | United Australia | 4,154 | 4.4 | -2.2 |
Jen Sackley | Independent | 2,981 | 3.2 | +3.2 |
Informal | 3,171 | 3.3 | -0.9 |
2022 two-candidate-preferred result
Candidate | Party | Votes | % | Swing |
Bob Katter | Katter’s Australian Party | 59,060 | 63.1 | -0.2 |
Bryce Macdonald | Liberal National | 34,544 | 36.9 | +0.2 |
2022 two-party-preferred result
Candidate | Party | Votes | % | Swing |
Bryce Macdonald | Liberal National | 56,312 | 60.2 | -4.4 |
Jason Brandon | Labor | 37,292 | 39.8 | +4.4 |
Booths have been divided into seven areas. Kennedy covers a massive geographic area.
Most of the booths lie close to the east coast of Queensland. Booths in Tablelands and Cassowary Coast council areas have been grouped together under the name of the council.Those booths in the south of Cairns Regional Council have been grouped as ‘Mulgrave’.
Booths in Carpentaria, Hinchinbrook and Townsville local council areas, along with a single booth across the border in Charters Towers council area have been grouped together as “Hinchinbrook”.
Booths in the inland towns of Mount Isa and Charters Towers have been grouped, with the remainder of remote polling places being grouped as ‘West’.
Bob Katter won a clear majority of the two-candidate-preferred vote in every area, ranging from 62.9% in Cassowary Coast to 72.3% in the west.
Voter group | ALP prim | KAP 2CP | Total votes | % of votes |
Tablelands | 13.4 | 67.1 | 9,188 | 9.8 |
Cassowary Coast | 15.2 | 62.9 | 7,595 | 8.1 |
Mulgrave | 22.5 | 68.8 | 6,788 | 7.3 |
Hinchinbrook | 14.2 | 64.7 | 4,406 | 4.7 |
Mount Isa | 17.5 | 72.1 | 3,461 | 3.7 |
West | 12.7 | 72.3 | 3,094 | 3.3 |
Charters Towers | 12.5 | 72.2 | 1,942 | 2.1 |
Pre-poll | 16.6 | 60.4 | 45,043 | 48.1 |
Other votes | 14.5 | 59.9 | 12,087 | 12.9 |
Election results in Kennedy at the 2022 federal election
Toggle between two-candidate-preferred votes (Katter’s Australian Party vs LNP), two-party-preferred votes and primary votes for Katter’s Australian Party, the Liberal National Party and Labor.
Enjoy.
So today, in a rant about Hamas’ attacks on Israel, Bob Katter again refused to acknowledge his Lebanese heritage, threatened to punch a journalist in the mouth for asking him about his Lebanese heritage. Katter claims to have “punched several blokes in the mouth for saying that” and claimed his family have been in Australia for 140 years and “since the dawn of time” and accused the journalist of racism. He did this back when Andrew Bolt asked him about this too.
Wow. A lot to unpack. Firstly, can’t he just retire?
Secondly, what’s wrong with having Lebanese heritage? I have Lebanese heritage, does that mean I’m a bad person, Bob? Is it not a bit of an overreaction for an elected official to threaten to punch a journalist for asking him about his Lebanese heritage, which there is information online about?
@Nether Portal no surprises here. Katter doesn’t know his elbow from his arse when it comes to a lot of things. How people find him remotely likeable is beyond any reasonable imagination.
@ Nether Portal
There is nothing wrong with having heritage from any part of the world. I think Bob Katter sees himself as completely assimilated and White. He does not see him as a hyphenated Australian. In someways he is as i dont think he speaks Arabic or engages in any Lebanese traditions. He family where Maronite Catholics, he is still religious but would now identify as Roman Catholic which is the largest Church in the country so i dont think he is a cultural minority while Josh Burns for example would be a minority.
it goes back to discussion here
https://www.tallyroom.com.au/archive/qld2024/hill2024
@Nimalan I mean the guy literally said some time ago that he’s got Aboriginal heritage. Like what now? I don’t even know if he knows what he’s on about, and we thought Joe Biden was declining cognitively.
@ Tommo9
I do think Bob Katter has a point though that he is completely assimilated and is now part of the majority. I say Prue Carr is also someways like that while both Varun Ghosh and Prue Carr are originally from Bengali one will be a minority in this country with darker skin, a non-Anglo name and a different religion the other is not. A bit like Ashton Agar and Ash Amhbimpar (MP for Barton) are both Sri Lankan they get treated differently in this country as one passes as European.
I’m curious to see how the media and the rest of the political establishment react to this.
While of course the incident was of a different nature, I am reminded of his refusal to swear allegiance to the King at the opening of parliament. Everyone was bemused but let it slide. I doubt any other politician would have been let off the hook for that so lightly.
I would have thought Bob Katter would be a strong monarchist. Kennedy wil be one the most pro-monarchy (after Maranoa) seats in the country while Melbourne the most Pro-Republic.
@Tommo9 he needs to retire. He’s been in politics for longer than I’ve been alive.
@Nimalan I think he is a monarchist, just doesn’t swear allegiance to the Crown.
i love me some Bob Katter. met him at the Pub Test in Tweed Heads in April.
this is likely his last term.