LNP 11.3%
Incumbent MP
Llew O’Brien, since 2016.
Geography
Wide Bay covers parts of the Queensland coast, including the towns of Noosa, Gympie and Maryborough, at the southern end of central Queensland as well as the northern end of the Sunshine Coast.
Wide Bay is an original federation electorate. It has been held for most of its history by the Nationals and its predecessors, although there have been two periods where it was held by the ALP for over a decade.
The seat was first won in 1901 by Gympie colonial MP Andrew Fisher, a prominent Labor member. Fisher had served as a minister in Anderson Dawson’s brief government in 1899, the first socialist government in the world.
Fisher served as a minister in Chris Watson’s federal Labor government in 1904, and became deputy leader of the ALP in 1905. He became the ALP’s leader in 1907. In 1908, Alfred Deakin’s minority government fell, and Fisher became Prime Minister at the head of a Labor minority government. This lasted until 1909, when Deakin returned to power at the head of a new unified Liberal party.
Fisher returned to office after the 1910 election, when the ALP won an unprecedented majority in the House of Representatives. This was the first time a party won a majority in a federal election. He governed until 1913, when he lost office to the Liberal Party, but he returned to power after Joseph Cook called a double dissolution in 1914. Fisher resigned from Parliament in 1915.
The ensuing Wide Bay by-election was won by Liberal candidate Edward Corser by only 86 votes. Corser was re-elected as a Nationalist in 1917, 1919, 1922 and 1925, dying in July 1928.
The 1928 Wide Bay by-election was won by Corser’s son, Bernard Corser, who stood for the Country Party. He held the seat until his retirement in 1954.
The seat was won in 1954 by the Country Party’s William Brand, who had previously served as a senior member of the party in the Queensland state parliament. He was re-elected in 1955 before retiring in 1958.
Wide Bay was won in 1958 by Country candidate Henry Bandidt, but lost in 1961 to the ALP’s Brendan Hansen. Hansen held Wide Bay until his retirement in 1974, and was elected to the Queensland state parliament for the seat of Maryborough from 1977 until 1983.
Upon Hansen’s retirement in 1974, the Country Party’s Clarrie Millar won back Wide Bay, and he held it until his retirement in 1990.
Wide Bay was won in 1990 by the National Party’s Warren Truss. Truss was made a junior minister in the Howard government in 1997 and joined the cabinet in 1999. He was elected Deputy Leader of the Nationals in 2005, and became party leader after the defeat of the Howard government.
Truss served as Nationals leader from 2008 until 2016, including as Deputy Prime Minister from 2013 to 2016.
Truss retired in 2016, and was succeeded by LNP candidate Llew O’Brien. O’Brien has been re-elected twice.
Assessment
Wide Bay is a safe LNP seat.
Candidate | Party | Votes | % | Swing |
Llew O’Brien | Liberal National | 41,601 | 43.5 | -3.6 |
Geoff Williams | Labor | 20,345 | 21.3 | -0.5 |
Nathan Buckley | One Nation | 9,765 | 10.2 | -0.6 |
Craig Armstrong | Greens | 9,088 | 9.5 | -0.4 |
Tracy Bennett | United Australia | 4,406 | 4.6 | +1.0 |
Kelli Jacobi | Independent | 4,106 | 4.3 | +4.3 |
Tim Jerome | Independent | 2,737 | 2.9 | -1.6 |
Andrea Newland | Informed Medical Options | 2,097 | 2.2 | +2.2 |
Daniel Williams | Values Party | 1,057 | 1.1 | +1.1 |
John Woodward | Federation Party | 501 | 0.5 | +0.5 |
Informal | 6,569 | 6.4 | +1.7 |
2022 two-party-preferred result
Candidate | Party | Votes | % | Swing |
Llew O’Brien | Liberal National | 58,708 | 61.3 | -1.8 |
Geoff Williams | Labor | 36,995 | 38.7 | +1.8 |
Booths have been divided into four areas. Polling places in Fraser Coast council area have been grouped as ‘Maryborough’ and those in the Sunshine Coast and Noosa council areas have been grouped as ‘Noosa’. Those booths in the town of Gympie have been grouped together as Gympie Urban. The remainder of the Gympie council area have been grouped together with the small number of booths in the South Burnett and Cherbourg council areas as ‘Gympie Rural’.
The LNP won a majority of the two-party-preferred vote in all four areas, ranging from 54.6% in Noosa to 64.8% in rural parts of Gympie.
One Nation came third, with a vote ranging from 8.4% in Noosa to 15.3% in Maryborough.
The Greens polled slightly less than One Nation, with their vote very concentrated in Noosa, where they polled 17.3%, and as low as 5.5% in rural Gympie.
Voter group | GRN prim | ON prim | LNP 2PP | Total votes | % of votes |
Noosa | 17.3 | 8.4 | 54.6 | 13,127 | 13.7 |
Gympie Rural | 5.5 | 12.8 | 64.8 | 9,863 | 10.3 |
Maryborough | 7.1 | 15.3 | 58.2 | 7,715 | 8.1 |
Gympie Urban | 9.2 | 13.3 | 62.1 | 6,692 | 7.0 |
Pre-poll | 8.4 | 9.0 | 62.0 | 40,309 | 42.1 |
Other votes | 9.5 | 9.4 | 64.1 | 17,997 | 18.8 |
Election results in Wide Bay at the 2022 federal election
Toggle between two-party-preferred votes and primary votes for the Liberal National Party, Labor, One Nation and the Greens.
@John Labor came 2nd in Southern Downs in 2020, One Nation only polled 10.1%
@Nether Portal the only way that One Nation wins this seat is if Llew O’Brien jumps ship, as he’s got a very big personal following. Then as soon as he retires, it would go back to being an LNP seat.
Sry my bad 2024 and 2017
Aa as previously mentioned he wil lose a bit of territory under the redistribution. So he personal vote goes out the windows
What’s the evidence for this “very big personal following” for Llew O’Brien?
Since 2019 he has had a cumulative 8.01% swing on primary votes. He has never won Wide Bay without preferences, something Warren Truss did twice. His primary vote in 2025 had a 3 in front of it. If he was to attract a third of the LNP support running as a hypothetical One Nation candidate in 2028, he would get 25% at best.
Swing away from him, that should read. Alas.
Real talk I cannot see one nation winning wide Bay. Unless the liberal party disbands. They cannot win a lnp v onp contest. They would need to force the lnp to 3rd.