Title: Should the Queensland Nationals and Liberal Party merge
1Should the Queensland Nationals and
Liberal Party merge?
2Background
- Qualitative research intercept interviews
- Brisbane, Surfers Broadbeach, Kawana and
Maroochydore - 82 qualitative interviews over five days
- 44 women
- 38 men
- All 18
3Research agenda
- Its been suggested that the Queensland Nationals
and Liberals merge to form one Party. Do you
think that is a good or a bad idea? - Why are you for a merger?
- Why are you against a merger?
- The Parties have had some differences in the
past. Do you think a merger would be more or less
likely to help them overcome these difficulties? - If the Parties merged, would they be a more or
less effective Opposition? - Why would they be more effective?
- Why would they be less effective?
- If these Parties merged to form a single Party
and became the State Government, would they do a
better or worse job than the current State
Government? - At the last State election did you vote National,
Liberal, Labor, or for someone else?
4What well cover
- The answers to the questions posed
- The deeper concerns raised
- The key findings
- Conclusion
- Recommendation
5The answers to the questions posed
6Its been suggested that the Queensland Nationals
and Liberals merge to form one Party. Do you
think that is a good or a bad idea?
7Why are you for a merger?
- At long last it may give Beattie a decent
Opposition - We need a conservative Opposition
- Queensland State Politics is too one sided
- It might stop all the infighting
- They might fight Labor rather than each other
- Only need two Parties
- The only chance of Government
8Why are you against a merger?
- Theyve never worked together properly, and
couldnt now - Two losers dont make one winner
- Theyd screw it up, and thatd be it for me and
most others I reckon - You get the worst of both Parties, Incompetent
rednecks. Whod vote for that? - The merger exists. Its called the Coalition.
Make that work for starters. - Springborg Quinn couldnt galvanise a roofing
nail, let alone two political Parties
9The Parties have had some differences in the
past. Do you think a merger would be more or less
likely to help them overcome these difficulties?
10If the Parties merged, would they be a more or
less effective Opposition?
11Why would they be more effective?
- In theory theyd present a united conservative
view - Fighting Labor not each other
- Get rid of the City / regional divide
- No distracting arguments, and not fighting each
other for the same seat.
12Why would they be less effective?
- Watered down policies to appease both
constituencies - Thinking too much about themselves, not the
people theyre supposed to represent - They couldnt agree on what to take to a picnic,
let alone what to do if they ran the place. - Never have agreed, never will agree. There are
too many nitpicky people involved
13If these Parties merged to form a single Party
and became the State Government, would they do a
better or worse job than the current State
Government?
14At the last State election did you vote National,
Liberal, Labor, or for someone else?
15The deeper concerns raised
16Two losers dont equal one winner
- The Parties were generally judged to be
underperforming. A merger was not an easy answer
to this - They should get their act together before they
try anything like that. - The Liberals are hopeless, and the Nationals are
worse. A merger isnt the answer, getting some
sensible policies and decent leadership is. - Two bad parties dont make one good one.
- If they put them together and they could be
voted out simultaneously. - The Nats are lost in the (nineteen) forties,
while the Libs are trapped in the seventies.
17Two and two is two
- Voters, particularly current Liberal voters, felt
joining with the Nationals would make their Party
less relevant - Id be less likely to vote Liberal if they were
tied up with those rednecks - Liberals are in enough trouble but not as
much as the Nationals. It would be like putting
on a concrete lifejacket. - The Nationals lost me when they cuddled up to
Hanson I couldnt vote for a party that did
that. - There are few enough reasons to think about
voting Liberal now this would just make it even
less appealing. - Theyre bad already. That would be worse.
18Whats in it for me?
- Many respondents could see no tangible personal
benefits in the merger, just negatives - Why? I mean, whats the point? It might make
them feel bigger or more important, but whats
the benefit for us? - Their policies would have to be watered down so
they could appeal to both City and Country. That
would be hard. We dont want the same things. - Its about them, not me.
19Whats the point?
- A number of respondents simply could not see the
point of a merger - I thought there was a coalition already. Whats
the problem with having that. The only reason I
can see that they might want to get together is
to try to look a bit bigger, or make the Leader
look less irrelevant. Other than that I just
cant see any point and by the way I dont think
it would help him anyway. I dont vote for them,
but Id not even think about it if they merged. - Its just silly isnt it? Plain silly.
20If it helps
- Reaction was superficially supportive, but the
possibility of the Parties getting it right was
overwhelmingly negative, however some people were
ambivalent - If it helps them get on with being a decent
opposition well why not? - I suppose theyve got good reasons for doing it.
Get with the power and all that. I dont mind. - It doesnt matter, but if it makes them feel
good well get on with it.
21Conservative tensions
- Some Liberals and people who have an
understanding of the local political scene see a
merger as a likely source of conflict - The members cant talk to each other now, just
look at Brisbane and the Gold Coast. Imagine the
ruckus if they joined. - If they got together then it would leave space
for someone to start a new Party. Katter or
Hanson or someone would fill the vacuum. - Its not happening nationally, so why would it
happen just here? It would be the tail wagging
the dog. - John Howard is the best leader the Nationals
have ever had. Thats how to do it.
22The key findings
23Key findings
- People are frustrated by the one-sided nature of
Queensland State politics. There is insufficient
balance. Beattie dominates. - People want a decent opposition, but the
fragmented Nationals and Liberals are not judged
to be one, in fact they are pretty pathetic and
the Liberals are now a minor Party - The Opposition Parties need to become effective,
and in this context, one way of doing so may be
to merge
24Merging is a good idea but
- Scale is not a replacement for performance
- Two losers dont make a winner
- The merger has been mooted in ways that are
advantageous for politicians and insiders, not
for voters. It should not be a power grab. It
should be a way to be a more effective
Opposition. - It must put an end to three corner contests,
factions and infighting
25Merging is a good idea but
- Choosing any brand name will cause vote leakage.
Loyalists expect their Liberal or National brand
to dominate. A third brand, such as CLP, is
equally offensive to these people - If Parties are to merge the public face
thereafter must be of a united, positive, active
and effective Opposition - Any factional bickering will be a sign that
nothing has changed, leading to massive and
possibly irreparable vote loss
26Merging is a good idea but
- Any disagreements need to be settled before an
announcement - If the Parties merge messily (meaning public
disagreements continue) then there is strong
potential for major damage to the combined vote.
27Who supports a merger?
- Support is strongest with older people, and with
opinion leaders - Others can agree with the merger proposition, but
are less committed - All segments can readily articulate why a merger
will not work, and further indicate that if it
proceeds and is badly handled (as evidenced by
infighting) they will walk away from the Party
28Who opposes a merger?
- People who are highly cynical and
- Think the Liberals are totally incompetent,
irrelevant or beyond redemption - Think the Nationals are rednecks
- Think that the two Parties have never worked
together, so will not now - Think that two losers dont make a winner
- Have an irrational brand loyalty to one Party,
and believe the other side is attempting to
grab power
29Whats a bad merger?
- A bad merger that would cost both Parties votes
would demonstrate - Failure to become an effective Opposition that
can take it to Beattie - Factional disputes
- Weak, compromised policies
- Weak leadership or joint leaders
- Snide stories in the media
30Whats a good merger?
- A good merger that would have the potential to
attract soft and swinging voters would
demonstrate - Cohesion no disputes
- Activity and a positive challenge to Beattie
- Strong policies
- Strong leader
31Conclusion
32Conclusion
- A merger that immediately and unequivocally
demonstrates that Queensland now has a cohesive,
active, positive and effective Opposition will be
well supported - A merger that shows any sign of lingering dissent
or discontent, through any public bickering or
disagreement will be abandoned by disillusioned
voters
33Recommendation
34Recommendation
- A very difficult four stage process is required
- Get both Parties to co-operate fully now, meaning
overt public agreement, common policies, no three
corner contests and most importantly no public
disagreements - Key Federal decision maker Brian
Loughnane (thus Shane Stone and John Howard)
should be engaged initially. Presumably Andrew
Hall (thus John Anderson) should be engaged too.
Without their endorsement and involvement the
plan will certainly fail. - Cut the merger deal, and get overt support and a
no bickering agreement from all State Federal
factions - AS A TEAM develop a 100 day implementation plan,
including policies and activities - Announce, and control any possibility of
break-outs. - Unless all four stages can be assured, the
process is extremely likely to be a catalyst that
drives many current and potential voters away,
thus utterly disastrous for the Coalition and
suicidal for its political advocates - Under no circumstance should Party leaders
announce an unresolved merger in the hope that
people will tolerate disagreements that will
eventually be resolved. This would backfire
badly.