The Division of Dickson is an Australian electoral division in Queensland. The incumbent MP is Ali France. A member of the Labor Party, she defeated incumbent MP and Liberal Party Leader Peter Dutton in the 2025 federal election.

Dickson includes the suburbs of Kurwongbah, Petrie, Strathpine, Bunya, Arana Hills, Albany Creek, Eatons Hill, Samford, Samford Valley, Dayboro, McDowall, Ferny Hills, Everton Hills and Murrumba Downs. The electorate also includes Lake Samsonvale and Lake Kurwongbah and covers 724 square kilometres.

History

100px|thumb|right|[[James Dickson (Queensland politician)|Sir James Dickson, the division's namesake]]

The division was formed in 1992 and is named after Sir James Dickson, a leading advocate in Australian Federation, Premier of Queensland and Minister for Defence in the first Australian ministry.

1993 election

There was an unusual circumstance at the 1993 election. The seat had been carved out of most of the Brisbane portion of the Sunshine Coast-based seat of Fisher, making it a natural choice for that seat's Labor MP, Michael Lavarch, to transfer ahead of the 1993 election.

However, one of the candidates, an independent, died very shortly before the election, making it necessary to hold a standalone supplementary election on 17 April (the rest of the country had already voted on 13 March). Following Labor's reelection, the Prime Minister Paul Keating announced the makeup of the Second Keating ministry to be sworn in on 24 March, but kept the portfolio of Attorney-General open for Lavarch subject to him winning Dickson on 17 April. He won the seat, and was appointed to the ministry on 27 April.

2025 election

Peter Dutton lost the seat at the 2025 federal election to Labor's Ali France, who previously contested the seat at the 2019 and 2022 elections. Dutton lost over seven percent of his primary vote from 2022, and was defeated on a swing of 7.7 percent after all preferences were distributed. France defeated Dutton after over three-fourths of Green preferences flowed to her. He is the first federal major party leader to lose his own seat since John Howard lost his electorate of Bennelong at the 2007 federal election, and the first sitting opposition leader since Federation to lose his own seat in parliament.

The division is located in the outer north-western suburbs of Brisbane. The 2006 redistribution added the Shire of Esk to and removed part of Kallangur from the seat. It has historically been a marginal seat, changing hands between the Australian Labor Party and the Liberal Party.

Members

{| class=wikitable style="text-align:center"

|-

! colspan=2 | Image

! Member

! Party

! Term

! Notes

|-

|-

| | 

| 100px

| Michael Lavarch<br>

| Labor

| nowrap | 17 April 1993 –<br/>2 March 1996

| Previously held the Division of Fisher. Served as minister under Paul Keating. Lost seat

|-

| |&nbsp;

| rowspan=2 | 100px

| rowspan=2 | Tony Smith<br>

| Liberal

| nowrap | 2 March 1996 –<br/>26 May 1998

| rowspan=2 | Lost seat

|-

| |&nbsp;

| nowrap | Independent

| nowrap | 26 May 1998 –<br/>3 October 1998

|-

| |&nbsp;

| 100px

| Cheryl Kernot<br>

| Labor

| nowrap | 3 October 1998 –<br/>10 November 2001

| Previously a member of the Senate. Lost seat

|-

| |&nbsp;

| 100px

| Peter Dutton<br>

| Liberal

| nowrap | 10 November 2001 –<br/>3 May 2025

| Served as minister under Howard, Abbott, Turnbull and Morrison. Served as Opposition Leader from 2022 to 2025. Lost seat

|-

| |&nbsp;

| 100px

| Ali France<br>

| Labor

| nowrap | 3 May 2025 –<br/>present

| Incumbent

|}

Election results

References

  • Division of Dickson (Qld) &mdash; Australian Electoral Commission