2012 Townsville City Council election

The 2012 Townsville City Council election was held on 28 April 2012 to elect a mayor and 10 councillors to the City of Townsville. The election was held as part of the statewide local elections in Queensland, Australia.[1]

2012 Townsville City Council election

← 200828 April 20122016 →
Mayor
 First partySecond partyThird party
 
TF
IND
CandidateJenny HillDale LastJeff Jimmieson
PartyTeam Jenny HillTownsville FirstIndependent
Popular vote28,50826,89815,301
Percentage33.74%31.83%18.11%
SwingIncrease 33.74Increase 31.83Increase 18.11
2CP51.58%48.42%
2CP swingIncrease 51.58Increase 48.42

Mayor before election

Les Tyrell
Team Tyrell

Subsequent Mayor

Jenny Hill
Team Jenny Hill

Councillors

All 11 members on the City Council (including the Mayor)
6 seats needed for a majority
PartyLeader%Seats+/–
Townsville FirstDale Last7+7
Team Jenny HillJenny Hill2+2
IndependentN/A1+1
This lists parties that won seats. See the complete results below.

Incumbent mayor Les Tyrell chose to retire from politics and did not recontest his position. Councillor Jenny Hill narrowly won the mayoralty with 51.58% of the vote after preferences, however Townsville First won a majority on council.[2]

Background

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At the previous election in 2008, the Labor Party, which had controlled the council for 32 years − the longest-serving Labor administration in Australia − was defeated in a landslide by the conservative Team Tyrell, which won all but one of the councillor positions. Incumbent mayor Tony Mooney was among the ALP members defeated.[3]

Less than a year after being elected, Team Tyrell councillor Rob McCahill announced his resignation on 9 October 2008, claiming that a "political witch-hunt" was threatening to destroy his family.[4] As the council was unsubdivided, the entire LGA had to vote in the by-election on 22 November, which was won by independent candidate Trevor Roberts. Team Tyrell did not contest the election.[5]

Changes to the council's structure were brought in for the 2012 election, with 10 single-member wards (also known as divisions) introduced.[6]

Candidates

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Incumbent mayor Les Tyrell announced on 27 October 2011 that he would retire from politics after 32 years, which included 17 years as Thuringowa mayor.[7]

Councillor Dale Last, who was elected on the Team Tyrell ticket in 2008, announced he would run for mayor and lead the Townsville First group, which ran candidates − including six serving Team Tyrell councillors − in all wards. Trevor Roberts also stood for the group.[8]

Labor did not contest the election. Jenny Hill, the only sitting Labor member on council, also ran for the mayoralty and formed Team Jenny Hill.

Results

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Mayor

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2012 Queensland mayoral elections: Townsville[9]
PartyCandidateVotes%±%
Team Jenny HillJenny Hill28,50833.74+33.74
Townsville FirstDale Last26,89831.83+31.83
IndependentJeff Jimmieson15,30118.11+18.11
IndependentBrendan Porter12,27714.53+14.53
IndependentHarry Patel1,5161.79+1.79
Total formal votes84,50096.34−2.37
Informal votes3,2073.66+2.37
Turnout87,70780.05
Two-candidate-preferred result
Team Jenny HillJenny Hill32,94651.58+51.58
Townsville FirstDale Last30,92848.42+48.42
Team Jenny Hill gain from Team TyrellSwing

References

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  1. ^ "2012 Local Government Elections". Electoral Commission of Queensland. Archived from the original on 15 January 2024.
  2. ^ "Uphill battle for King Les's man". The Courier Mail.
  3. ^ "How it happened: a defining moment in politics". Townsville Bulletin. 15 March 2018.
  4. ^ "Councillor quits amidst 'witch-hunt' claims". ABC News.
  5. ^ "McCahill resignation forces Townsville council by-election". ABC News.
  6. ^ "2011- 2012 Annual Report" (PDF). Electoral Commission of Queensland.
  7. ^ "Townsville Mayor Les Tyrell has just announced he will not run at the next council elections". Facebook. Townsville Bulletin.
  8. ^ "Former Townsville First councillor Trevor Roberts announces re-election bid in Division 6". Townsville Bulletin.
  9. ^ "2012 Townsville City Council - Mayoral Election - Election Summary". Electoral Commission of Queensland.