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Division of Rankin
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The Division of Rankin is an Australian electoral division in the state of Queensland. It is to the southeast of Brisbane, comprising parts of the City of Brisbane and City of Logan.
Key Information
The Australian Labor Party (ALP) has continuously held the seat since its establishment in 1984. Since 2013 its MP has been Jim Chalmers, who has been Treasurer of Australia under Prime Minister Anthony Albanese since 2022.
Geography
[edit]Since 1984, federal electoral division boundaries in Australia have been determined at redistributions by determined by a redistribution made up of statutory appointments. Redistributions occur for the boundaries of divisions in a particular state, and they occur every seven years, or sooner if a state's representation entitlement changes or when divisions of a state are malapportioned.[1]
Today Rankin is based on the outer southern suburbs of the City of Brisbane, in addition to portions of the City of Logan.
History
[edit]
The division was created in 1984 and is named after Dame Annabelle Rankin, the first Queensland woman elected to the Senate. Rankin served as a government minister under four successive prime ministers in the 1960s and 1970s, before she was appointed High Commissioner of Australia to New Zealand, becoming the first woman to head an Australian mission overseas.
In its original form, Rankin covered the Gold Coast hinterland including Lamington National Park and the major town of Beaudesert as well as some outer metropolitan areas of Brisbane. In this situation it was a marginal seat held by the Labor Party. However, with the transfer of the rural hinterland to Forde, Rankin became a much safer Labor seat, being one of only two Queensland seats the ALP retained in the 1996 election.
Members
[edit]| Image | Member | Party | Term | Notes | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| David Beddall (1948–) |
Labor | 1 December 1984 – 31 August 1998 |
Previously held the Division of Fadden. Served as minister under Hawke and Keating. Retired | ||
| Craig Emerson (1954–) |
3 October 1998 – 5 August 2013 |
Served as minister under Rudd and Gillard. Retired | |||
| Jim Chalmers (1978–) |
7 September 2013 – present |
Incumbent. Currently a minister under Albanese | |||
Election results
[edit]| Party | Candidate | Votes | % | ±% | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Labor | Jim Chalmers | 45,303 | 49.42 | +5.47 | |
| Liberal National | Paul Darwen | 18,101 | 19.75 | −9.26 | |
| Greens | Joshua Riethmuller | 10,032 | 10.94 | +0.24 | |
| One Nation | Kyle Lentz | 6,021 | 6.57 | −1.41 | |
| Family First | Carol Ordish | 3,862 | 4.21 | +4.21 | |
| People First | Lana Hudson | 3,416 | 3.73 | +3.73 | |
| Trumpet of Patriots | Janet Lindbom | 3,300 | 3.60 | +3.60 | |
| Socialist Alliance | Alex Bainbridge | 1,634 | 1.78 | +1.78 | |
| Total formal votes | 91,669 | 93.57 | −2.54 | ||
| Informal votes | 6,304 | 6.43 | +2.54 | ||
| Turnout | 97,973 | 85.23 | +0.67 | ||
| Two-party-preferred result | |||||
| Labor | Jim Chalmers | 60,092 | 65.55 | +6.46 | |
| Liberal National | Paul Darwen | 31,577 | 34.45 | −6.46 | |
| Labor hold | Swing | +6.46 | |||
References
[edit]- ^ Muller, Damon (14 November 2017). "The process of federal redistributions: a quick guide". Parliament of Australia. Archived from the original on 23 May 2022. Retrieved 19 April 2022.
- ^ Rankin, Qld, 2025 Tally Room, Australian Electoral Commission.
External links
[edit]Division of Rankin
View on GrokipediaGeography and Demographics
Boundaries and Suburbs
The Division of Rankin covers an area of 131 square kilometres in the outer metropolitan region to the southeast of Brisbane, Queensland. It encompasses portions of the City of Brisbane and City of Logan local government areas, focusing on zones of recent suburban development in the state's capital region. The current boundaries were determined by the 2017 redistribution and gazetted on 27 March 2018.[4] The electorate includes the following suburbs and localities: Algester, Berrinba, Browns Plains, Calamvale, Crestmead, Daisy Hill, Drewvale, Heritage Park, Hillcrest, Karawatha, Kingston, Logan Central, Loganlea, Marsden, Meadowbrook, Parkinson, Priestdale, and Regents Park. Some of these areas, such as Daisy Hill, Loganlea, and Meadowbrook, are shared with adjacent divisions including Forde, while minor portions like Point Talburpin and Redland Bay overlap with Bowman.[5][4]Population Composition and Trends
As of the 2021 Australian Census, the Division of Rankin had a population of 186,856 residents.[6] The median age was 34 years, younger than Queensland's median of 38, with 22.9% of residents under 15 years and 12.3% aged 65 and over.[6] Aboriginal and/or Torres Strait Islander people comprised 3.5% of the population, higher than the state average of 4.6% but aligned with broader Queensland trends in urban-fringe areas.[6] The ancestry profile reflects a mix of Anglo-Celtic heritage and growing Asian influences, with the most common responses being English (27.0%), Australian (24.4%), and Chinese (9.0%).[6] Country of birth data indicates 73.4% were born in Australia, with top overseas origins including New Zealand (6.6%), China (3.4%), and India (2.9%).[6] Languages spoken at home were predominantly English only (61.6%), followed by Mandarin (5.5%) and Cantonese (1.9%), underscoring increasing linguistic diversity.[6] Family structures included 47.3% couple families with children, 29.6% couples without children, and 21.3% one-parent families.[6] Population trends show steady growth, rising from 179,170 in the 2016 Census to 186,856 in 2021, a 4.3% increase driven by natural growth and net migration in South East Queensland's expanding suburbs.[7][6] Demographic shifts include a marked rise in Chinese ancestry from 6.4% in 2016 to 9.0% in 2021, alongside increases in English (from 22.0%) and Australian (from 19.8%) ancestries, reflecting immigration patterns and self-identification changes.[7][6] The proportion of residents with at least one overseas-born parent reached 49.4%, exceeding Queensland's 27.9%, indicating accelerated diversification compared to the state.[6] The electorate's younger age profile and family-oriented composition have persisted, supporting its classification as an outer metropolitan growth area.[6]Economy and Social Profile
Key Industries and Employment
The Division of Rankin's employment landscape is dominated by service sectors and trades, consistent with its position as a peri-urban electorate in southeast Queensland. Data from the 2021 Australian Census indicate a labour force of 87,702 persons aged 15 and over, representing 60.8% participation, below the Queensland rate of 61.6%. Of these, 80,955 were employed, with 47,696 in full-time roles (54.4% of employed) and 26,237 part-time (29.9%). Unemployment affected 6,747 individuals, yielding a rate of 7.7%, exceeding the state average of 5.4%.[6] Prominent industries by employment share, based on place of usual residence, center on health care, retail, and food services. Hospitals employed 3,312 persons (4.1% of total employed), aged care residential care 2,120 (2.6%), supermarkets and grocery stores 2,724 (3.4%), and takeaway food services 2,258 (2.8%). Other social assistance services followed with 2,083 jobs (2.6%). These concentrations align with the electorate's demographics, including a relatively young population and proximity to Brisbane's medical and commercial hubs.[6] As part of Logan City, the division benefits from regional industrial strengths in manufacturing, construction, and logistics, particularly in suburbs like Carole Park and Berrinba. Logan-wide employment data for 2023/24, modelled from national estimates, show health care and social assistance as the largest sector at 18.5% (24,537 jobs), driven by facilities serving the growing population. Construction accounts for 14.2% (18,733 jobs), reflecting ongoing residential and infrastructure development, while retail trade holds 11.6% (15,319 jobs). Manufacturing contributes 7.2% (9,542 jobs), supported by factories in automotive parts and metal fabrication.[8]| Industry Sector | Employment (Jobs) | Share (%) |
|---|---|---|
| Health Care and Social Assistance | 24,537 | 18.5 |
| Construction | 18,733 | 14.2 |
| Retail Trade | 15,319 | 11.6 |
| Education and Training | 13,877 | 10.5 |
| Manufacturing | 9,542 | 7.2 |
Socioeconomic Challenges and Indicators
The Division of Rankin faces notable socioeconomic challenges, characterized by lower-than-average income levels and elevated unemployment. In the 2021 Census, the median weekly household income stood at $1,610, with 14.9% of households earning less than $650 per week.[6] This reflects a reliance on lower-wage sectors, compounded by a 7.7% unemployment rate among the labour force (aged 15 and over), higher than contemporaneous national figures influenced by post-COVID recovery dynamics.[6] Labour force participation was 60.8%, indicating potential barriers to employment entry for segments of the population.[6] Educational attainment contributes to these challenges, with only 19.2% of residents aged 15 and over holding a bachelor degree or higher, alongside 18.2% completing Year 12 as their highest qualification and 14.3% at Certificate III level.[6] Occupational profiles underscore a concentration in mid-skill roles, such as clerical and administrative workers (13.6%) and technicians/trades workers (13.5%), with professionals comprising just 17.3%.[6] Family structures amplify vulnerability, as one-parent families accounted for 21.3% of couples with children, a demographic often linked to income instability and reliance on welfare supports.[6] Housing indicators reveal affordability pressures despite a median weekly rent of $350 and monthly mortgage repayments of $1,650; 36.3% of dwellings were rented, with outright ownership at 22.6%.[6] Relative socioeconomic disadvantage is evident in SEIFA distributions, where a significant portion of the division's SA1 areas fall into lower deciles for the Index of Relative Socio-Economic Advantage and Disadvantage, signaling limited access to resources and services compared to more affluent electorates. These factors collectively hinder upward mobility, with empirical patterns showing correlations between such profiles and persistent cycles of low educational outcomes and employment precarity.[9]| Indicator | Value (2021 Census) | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Median Weekly Household Income | $1,610 | Below national benchmark |
| Unemployment Rate | 7.7% | Of labour force aged 15+ |
| Bachelor Degree or Higher | 19.2% | Aged 15+ population |
| One-Parent Families | 21.3% | Of families with children |
| Rented Dwellings | 36.3% | Higher rental tenure |
History
Establishment in 1984
The Division of Rankin was created during a federal electoral redistribution in Queensland, prompted by the state's population growth exceeding the enrolment quota threshold under section 59 of the Commonwealth Electoral Act 1918. This redistribution, initiated after the 1983 federal election, added one new division to Queensland's representation in the House of Representatives, expanding from 19 to 20 seats to better reflect demographic shifts, particularly in outer metropolitan areas southeast of Brisbane. The Australian Electoral Commission (AEC) defined the division's initial boundaries to encompass growing suburbs in the Logan City region, including Browns Plains, Loganlea, and Waterford, drawing primarily from portions of the abolished Division of McPherson and adjacent electorates. The division was named in honour of Dame Annabelle Rankin, the first Queensland woman elected to the federal Senate in 1946 and later Australia's first female cabinet minister as Minister for Housing from 1966 to 1969, recognizing her contributions to public service and women's political participation. It was first contested at the 1 December 1984 federal election, where Australian Labor Party (ALP) candidate David Beddall secured victory with 52.7% of the two-party-preferred vote against the Liberal candidate, reflecting the electorate's working-class demographics and proximity to industrial and suburban development zones. Beddall's win contributed to the ALP's narrow national majority under Bob Hawke, with Rankin becoming a safe Labor seat in subsequent elections.[10][4]Boundary Redistributions and Changes
The Division of Rankin was established ahead of the 1984 federal election as one of Queensland's new electoral divisions to accommodate population growth in the state's south-eastern suburbs.[4] Boundary adjustments occur through periodic federal redistributions mandated by the Australian Electoral Commission to maintain electoral equality, typically triggered by changes in state representation or every seven years.[11] Queensland has undergone redistributions in 1988, 1997, 2003, and 2017, each altering Rankin's extent to reflect demographic shifts toward outer metropolitan areas.[12][13] The 2017 redistribution, prompted by the addition of one seat to Queensland's allocation, significantly impacted Rankin by realigning boundaries with growing suburban developments in Logan and Brisbane cities.[14] The revised boundaries were proposed in August 2017, finalized after public objections, and gazetted on 27 March 2018, taking effect for the 2019 election.[15][4] These changes incorporated areas of recent residential expansion while ensuring the division's enrolment aligned with the quota of approximately 110,000 electors.[16] A further redistribution for Queensland commenced in 2025 to address ongoing population dynamics, with proposals expected to refine Rankin's boundaries once more.[17]Namesake
Life and Career of Dame Annabelle Rankin
Annabelle Jane Mary Rankin was born on 28 July 1908 in Brisbane, Queensland, the elder daughter of Scottish-born parents Colin Dunlop Wilson Rankin, a cane farmer and later Queensland Legislative Assembly member, and Annabelle Jane Mary Rankin (née Rankin).[18][19] The family relocated to a sugar-cane farm near Childers, where she attended Childers State School; following her uncle's death in 1919, they moved to Howard, and she continued at Howard State School.[18][19] Rankin later boarded at Glennie Memorial School in Toowoomba and completed her secondary education at St Margaret's Anglican School for Girls in Brisbane.[18][19] After leaving school, Rankin worked as a secretary to her father during his political tenure and became involved in community organizations, serving as Queensland state commissioner for the Girl Guides Association from 1935 to 1942 and as state secretary thereafter.[20][21] She also contributed to wartime efforts as a member of the Voluntary Aid Detachment from 1940 to 1942.[20] Active in the Liberal Party of Australia, Rankin was elected to the Senate for Queensland in the 1946 federal election, taking her seat on 1 July 1947 as the first woman to represent the state in federal Parliament.[19][21] She was re-elected in 1951, 1955, 1961, and 1967, serving continuously until her resignation on 24 May 1971.[20] In the Senate, Rankin held the position of Opposition Whip from 1947 to 1949, becoming the first woman in the British Commonwealth to serve in such a role, and later Government Whip from 1951 to 1966.[19][22] Appointed Minister for Housing in the Holt, Gorton, and McMahon governments from 1966 to 1971, she was the first woman to enter federal Cabinet in Australia.[18][19] Following her parliamentary resignation, Rankin was appointed Australian High Commissioner to New Zealand, serving from 1971 to 1974.[20] She was appointed Dame Commander of the Order of the British Empire (DBE) in 1971 for her public service.[18] Unmarried, Rankin retired to Brisbane, where she died on 30 August 1986 at age 78; a state funeral was held at St John's Anglican Cathedral before cremation.[18][19] Her contributions to politics and community service were recognized through various honors, including the naming of facilities and awards in her name.[18]Political Legacy and Naming Rationale
Dame Annabelle Rankin's political legacy is marked by her pioneering role in advancing women's participation in Australian federal politics and her contributions to housing policy. As Australia's first female Minister for Housing from 1966 to 1971, she oversaw initiatives to expand public housing amid post-war population growth, including the allocation of funds for over 20,000 new homes annually under the Holt and Gorton governments, emphasizing affordable accommodation for families.[19] Her tenure as the inaugural woman to administer a substantive federal portfolio challenged gender norms in a male-dominated parliament, setting precedents for subsequent female ministers while maintaining a conservative Liberal focus on individual opportunity and social stability rather than radical reform.[23] Rankin's 24-year Senate service (1947–1971), the longest of any woman at the time, included roles as Opposition Whip (1947–1949) and Government Whip, where she facilitated bipartisan cooperation on welfare and immigration matters, earning recognition as the "Mother of the Senate" for her institutional knowledge and mentorship of junior parliamentarians.[24] Post-parliament, her appointment as High Commissioner to New Zealand (1971–1974) extended her influence, strengthening bilateral ties through advocacy for trade and cultural exchanges, though her diplomatic style reflected traditional conservative diplomacy over assertive foreign policy shifts.[18] The naming of the Division of Rankin in Queensland's 1984 electoral redistribution honored her as a trailblazing Queenslander whose career exemplified Liberal values of service and progress. Established to accommodate population growth in Brisbane's south-east, the electorate was deliberately named after Rankin to commemorate her status as the state's first woman elected to federal parliament and her whip positions, which underscored disciplined governance and party unity.[25] This rationale aligned with the Australian Electoral Commission's practice of recognizing deceased parliamentarians with significant regional ties, selecting Rankin over other figures due to her enduring impact on Queensland representation and her uncontroversial record of longevity and effectiveness, as noted in parliamentary tributes following her 1986 death.[18] The choice reflected a commitment to historical equity in electoral nomenclature, avoiding partisan favoritism while highlighting her barrier-breaking achievements in an era when female political participation remained limited.[19]Parliamentary Representation
List of Members Since Inception
The Division of Rankin has been continuously held by the Australian Labor Party since its establishment ahead of the 1984 federal election.[10][2][3]| Member | Party | Term |
|---|---|---|
| David Beddall | Australian Labor Party | 1984–1998 |
| Craig Emerson | Australian Labor Party | 1998–2013 |
| Jim Chalmers | Australian Labor Party | 2013–present |
Profiles of Notable Incumbents
Craig Emerson served as the Member for Rankin from 1998 until his retirement prior to the 2013 federal election.[2] An economist holding a PhD from the Australian National University, Emerson previously operated an economic and environmental consulting business before entering parliament. During his tenure, he held multiple ministerial portfolios in the Rudd and Gillard governments, including Minister for Small Business, Independent Contractors and the Service Economy from December 2007 to September 2010, and Minister for Trade and Competitiveness from September 2010 to September 2012.[26] Emerson also served as Minister Assisting the Prime Minister on the Asian Century from 2011 to 2013, during which he led the development of the 2012 White Paper on Australia in the Asian Century, a policy framework aimed at enhancing Australia's economic engagement with Asia through education, innovation, and trade reforms.[27] Jim Chalmers has represented Rankin since winning the seat in the 2013 federal election, with re-elections in 2016, 2019, 2022, and 2025.[3] Prior to parliament, Chalmers worked as chief of staff to the Deputy Prime Minister and Treasurer and as executive director of the Chifley Research Centre, holding a PhD in political science and international relations from the Australian National University.[28] In opposition, he served as Shadow Minister for Financial Services and Superannuation from 2015 to 2016, Shadow Minister for Finance from 2016 to 2019, and Shadow Treasurer from 2019 to 2022.[29] Since the election of the Albanese government in May 2022, Chalmers has been Australia's Treasurer, overseeing fiscal policy, including the 2023-24 federal budget that projected a surplus of A$22 billion for 2022-23—the first in 15 years—amid post-COVID economic recovery efforts, while managing inflation through targeted spending cuts and revenue measures.[3] As Treasurer, he has advocated for productivity-enhancing reforms, such as tax incentives for investment and competition policy reviews, drawing on empirical analyses of GDP growth drivers.[30]Electoral Dynamics
Historical Voting Patterns and Party Performance
The Division of Rankin has returned Australian Labor Party candidates in every federal election since its creation ahead of the 1984 poll, reflecting strong and consistent voter support in its working-class and suburban demographics. Two-party preferred margins favoring Labor have typically exceeded 10%, rendering the seat resilient to national swings against the party, including during the 1996 landslide defeat of the Keating government and the 2010 hung parliament. Primary vote shares for Labor have hovered between 42% and 48% across most contests, bolstered by preferences from Greens and minor parties, while the Liberal National Party (LNP, the local Coalition affiliate) has struggled to surpass 40% in two-party terms. In the 2019 election, amid a national swing to the Coalition, Labor retained the seat with 55.15% of the two-party preferred vote against the LNP's 44.85%, maintaining a margin of 11.3% despite a 1.8% swing away from the party. The 2022 contest saw further consolidation, with Labor achieving 59.09% two-party preferred (51,892 votes) to the LNP's 40.91% (35,930 votes), expanding the margin to 18.18% on a 2.65% swing to Labor, driven by primary vote gains amid Queensland's regional shifts toward minor parties like One Nation. These results underscore Rankin's alignment with broader Queensland Labor strongholds, where economic concerns and union ties sustain performance, though booth-level variations show slightly weaker support in newer southern suburbs.[31][32]Analysis of Recent Elections (2019–2025)
In the 2019 federal election held on 18 May, the Division of Rankin was retained by incumbent Labor MP Jim Chalmers with a two-candidate preferred (TCP) vote of 56.44% against the Liberal National Party (LNP) candidate's 43.56%, yielding a margin of 10,922 votes.[33] Labor's primary vote stood at 41.43%, down from the previous election, amid a statewide swing against the party in Queensland, while the LNP secured 31.35%; minor parties included the Greens at 9.08% and One Nation at 8.56%.[33] This outcome reflected a TCP swing of -4.86% to the LNP, consistent with Labor's national loss but moderated by the seat's working-class demographics and Chalmers' local profile, with turnout at 88.82%.[33] The 2022 election on 21 May saw Chalmers strengthen Labor's hold, achieving a TCP of 59.09% to the LNP's 40.91% (margin: 15,962 votes), with a +2.65% swing favoring Labor amid the party's national victory.[32] Primary votes shifted to Labor at 43.95% and LNP at 29.01%, with Greens rising to 10.70% and One Nation at 7.98%; others totaled 8.36%.[32] Turnout dipped to 84.56%, yet the result underscored Rankin's status as Labor's most secure Queensland seat since 1984, buoyed by preferences from minor parties and Chalmers' elevation to shadow treasurer.[32] By the 2025 election on 3 May, Chalmers secured a decisive TCP win of 65.55% against LNP challenger Paul Darwen's 34.45% (margin: 28,515 votes), marking a +6.46% swing to Labor.[34] Labor's primary surged to 49.42%, while LNP plummeted to 19.75%; Greens held at 10.94%, One Nation fell to 6.57%, and others rose to 13.32% amid fragmented right-wing votes (e.g., Family First 4.21%).[34] With 85.23% turnout (97,973 formal votes), this expanded margin highlighted sustained local support, potentially driven by Chalmers' role as Treasurer and economic messaging resonating in the division's suburban and industrial base, despite national volatility.[34]| Election Year | Labor Primary (%) | LNP Primary (%) | TCP Labor (%) | Margin (Votes) | Swing to Labor (TCP) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2019 | 41.43 | 31.35 | 56.44 | 10,922 | -4.86 |
| 2022 | 43.95 | 29.01 | 59.09 | 15,962 | +2.65 |
| 2025 | 49.42 | 19.75 | 65.55 | 28,515 | +6.46 |

