Miles to remain the man despite historic election hiding
The defeated Labor Party caucus will meet in Brisbane tomorrow to formalise Steven Miles’s endorsement as opposition leader, nine days after spearheading them to a thumping defeat.
Stay up to date with news about current Premier of Queensland and 2024 State Election candidate, Steven Miles. Discover the latest stories, vote in polls, and have your say in the comments below.
The defeated Labor Party caucus will meet in Brisbane tomorrow to formalise Steven Miles’s endorsement as opposition leader, nine days after spearheading them to a thumping defeat.
Premier Steven Miles’ unprecedented election pledge to open 50 bulk-billing GP clinics has not gone down well among Courier-Mail readers with many slamming it as completely unrealistic.
Steven Miles has ruled out deals with minor parties saying Labor players to “test its numbers” on the floor of parliament should Queenslanders vote against him later this month.
Fifty cent fares may have a much greater impact than encouraging South East Queenslanders to get out of the house, writes the editor.
Opinion: The Opposition faces challenges the government doesn’t, making the campaign a handicap race stacked in Labor’s favour, writes Graham Young.
With Thursday the final sitting day of Parliament before the election, don’t expect anything resembling civilised debate, writes state political editor Hayden Johnson.
Premier Steven Miles has banished Annastacia Palaszczuk from Labor’s campaign trail the day after she publicly refused to endorse him.
Premier Steven Miles has given his response after footage appeared to capture his predecessor and one-time political ally Annastacia Palaszczuk brutally snubbing him when asked for her endorsement. WATCH THE VIDEO
These new showbags, made from recycled press releases blaming Campbell Newman for everything, are stuffed with goodies, writes Mike O’Connor.
Premier Steven Miles’ extraordinary promise to build state-owned service stations isn’t backed by research or modelling, with economists labelling the plan a crude, populist, low-rent gimmick.
A peak body has called on whoever forms the next Queensland government to undertake a full audit and cleanout of one aspect of the public service.
Labor insiders are saying it’s now better for the party’s future to lose in key regional seats at the October state election in a bid to rise from the ashes in four years’ time.
Original URL: https://www.couriermail.com.au/topics/steven-miles