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QLD election 2020 live updates: Opposition Leader Deb Frecklington announces youth curfew - NEWS.com.au

The three seats in Townsville are widely considered to be vital electorates to deciding which party will form government following the October 31 state election, with the Liberal-National Party previously signalling its intentions to capitalise on the topical issue of crime.

It has a former police inspector, Glenn Doyle, contesting the seat of Mundingburra and it has previously committed to automatically locking up kids after a third conviction.

But the curfew is the most extraordinary pitch to prise the three marginal seats away from the incumbent Labor government.

Under the plan, children aged 14 and under will be picked up by police if they are out past 8pm and those between the ages of 15 and 17 aren’t off the streets by 10pm.

They will be taken to local community refuges where they will be supervised and provided with support by youth and health workers, the party said.

Parents will be fined $250 if their children are unable to provide a reasonable excuse to why they’re out past these times.

RELATED: Latest news from the state election

“We need to make sure this community is kept safe,” Ms Frecklington told reporters from Townsville on Wednesday morning.

“Under labor there is no plan to be tough on crime … business as usual won’t cut it.

“If you are on the streets doing the wrong thing, you’ll be taken off the streets.”

Follow the election blog below for the latest news from the campaign.

Live Updates

The highway linking Brisbane and Cairns has been a hot topic in the state election.

The LNP pledged at the start of the campaign that it would double its width to four lanes all the way through to the north.

And today Labor revealed its plan, saying it will build a second Bruce Highway to run parallel to the existing road to reduce the number of trucks and ease congestion.

"If re-elected, we have a vision to build an inland highway from Charters Towers to Mungindi," Premier Annastacia Palaszczuk said.

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Under the plan, children aged 14 and under will be picked up by police if they are out past 8pm and those between the ages of 15 and 17 aren’t off the streets by 10pm.

Parents will be fined $250 if their children are unable to provide a reasonable excuse to why they're out past these times.

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Queensland deputy premier Steven Miles reaffirmed his party's position to preference One Nation last in the upcoming state election despite rogue MPs defying Labor's basic instructions.

Mr Miles labelled Pauline Hanson’s party the “worst of the freaks and weirdos” ahead of the polls closing on October 31, but amid his name calling he confusingly left the door slightly ajar for others to be pushed to the back of the line in each electorate behind One Nation.

“If there are worse freaks and weirdos, they will be considered,” the deputy premier said.

The Labor preference strategy appeared to provide a simple and consistent message but a number of party members have muddied the waters after being spotted actively advocating for voters to preference the Liberal-National Party last.

This allowed senior LNP Senator Matt Canavan to step in and question Mr Miles’, saying the deputy premier had “as much punch as a pensioner”.

“It’s pretty disappointing that he’s so inconsistent,” Mr Canavan told Today on Wednesday morning. “He seems so unsure of himself and then you have his own candidates out there contradicting him.

“On the same day he was saying that, Labor candidates are running around saying ‘Put the LNP last’. The Labor Party has lost all credibility on this issue. Their rhetoric is completely empty because they’ve been caught red handed saying one thing but doing the complete opposite.”

Queensland has reported one new coronavirus case on Wednesday, taking the total number of active infections to five.

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Opposition Leader Deb Frecklington has announced the LNP will trial a curfew in Townsville and Cairns to control youth crime.

Three seats around the northern Queensland hub are all tightly held by Labor and it's widely viewed as the seats where the election will be won or lost.

The LNP has capitalised on the issue of youth crime in this region, promising to introduce reforms to automatically lock children up after committing a third crime.

And today's announcement is a further promise to voters on the topical issue.

"We need to make sure this community is kept safe," Ms Frecklington told reporters from Townsville on Wednesday morning.

"Under labor there is no plan to be tough on crime … business as usual won't cut it.

"If you are on the streets doing the wrong thing, you'll be taken off the streets."

There have been a number of filmed debates over the last few weeks in the lead up to the October 31 state election.

But today is when the juicy stuff starts when former deputy premier Jackie Trad faces Greens candidate Amy MacMahon in the debate for the seat of South Brisbane.

Ms Trad has been mired in controversy since she was forced to step down from leadership over a corruption investigation.

She has since been cleared of any wrongdoing but has remained the outsider after Premier Annastacia Palaszczuk said she will not be welcomed back into cabinet if Labor retains power.

Compounding the electorate battle is the surging popularity of the Greens.

The progressive party performed strongly in the QLD council elections earlier in the year on the back of pressing environmental concerns after the summer's devastating bushfires.

Greens also have their tails up after a strong swing in the local ACT election on the weekend.

The two candidates will debate on the Courier Mail website at 12.00pm Brisbane time (1.00pm in Sydney), which will be covered live right here.

One Nation chief Pauline Hanson said Labor MP Brittany Lauga has "been completely useless" as the sitting member for Keppel in Central Queensland.

Premier Annastacia Palaszczuk's assistant minister for education faces a tough battle to retain the marginal seat, which was made even more difficult after she was revealed as a rogue MP defying party orders.

Volunteers for Craig Crawford, Labor MP in another marginal seat Barron River, and Ms Lauga were spotted holding placards insisting voters “Put the LNP last”.

This was after Labor candidate Mike Brunker, who is vying for the seat of Burdekin, south of Townsville, was advocating voters for the same preference despite clear orders from senior party leaders.

Both Annastacia Palaszczuk and Deb Frecklington are adamant they will not form a minority government with any cross bench MPs, and have both returned to the key battleground of Townsville to make another pitch to voters in three marginal seats.

But, with at least six per cent of Queenslanders having already cast their vote in the last two days, it’s possible it could be too late for any last-minute sweet talking.

As of 3.30pm on Tuesday, 228,000 people had already voted, according to the Electoral Commission of Queensland.

And, by cut off last Friday, the ECQ had received 890,000 postal vote applications, with many of those applicants expected to cast their vote when they receive their forms this week.

Already, 6 per cent of the state’s 3.3 million voters have made up their mind and cast their vote, with that number expected to rise in coming days.

Official, there are still ten days to go in this election campaign, with many voters expected to remain traditional and cast their vote on October 31.

Both Ms Palaszczuk and Ms Frecklington have returned to Townsville, where they are fighting to win the ultra-marginal seat of Townsville (held by ALP with 0.4 per cent majority), and neighbouring seats of Thuringowa (held by ALP by 4.1 per cent), and Mundingburra (held by ALP by 1.1 per cent).

In the words of political scientist Dr Paul Williams, the three Townsville seats “could decide the election.”

If the LNP pinches all three marginal seats, the Labor Party is in real danger of losing any hopes of a majority government.

It’s the third time in as many weeks that Ms Frecklington has visited the north Queensland city, and the second time Ms Palaszczuk has.

Previously, Ms Frecklington has focused her announcements in Townsville on manufacturing, whereas Ms Palaszczuk committed to a TAFE funding boost.

The major issues concerning Townsville are crime and tourism, neither of which have been the focus of any announcements made by the two leaders in the campaign so far.

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2020-10-21 00:13:46Z
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