The current period of Labor dominance of mainland politics is likely to be brief: Queensland Labor now looks set for a wipe-out in October in the wake of huge swings to the Liberal National Party on the weekend. That means that the problems of Brisbane’s disastrous “winning” of the 2032 Olympics (against exactly no competition) will belong to the LNP from then on.
Queensland Labor has discovered, to its cost, that voters are starting to wise up to the pernicious habit of politicians promising major sports infrastructure that yields minimal social or economic benefit and ends up costing far more than promised.
The dodgy maths on which the then Palaszczuk government’s case for the Olympics was built has long been apparent. But the political problems have only become clearer recently. Annastacia Palaszczuk had committed to a knockdown and rebuild of the Gabba as part of the Olympics — which even the spivs of the International Olympic Committee said wasn’t necessary — but that idea steadily garnered opposition, especially with the cost initially expected to be $2.7 billion.
The new premier, Steven Miles, read the room, put the whole thing on pause late last year and hired former Labor Brisbane mayor Graham Quirk to “review” venue requirements for the Olympics in January.
Quirk, unsurprisingly, has nixed the idea of the Gabba rebuild, saying the cost had already blown out to at least $3 billion — demonstrating yet again that no major project infrastructure costing from any Australian government should be believed. But problematically, Quirk says the Gabba can never be “a top-level tier one stadium” because of the lack of space and the fact that it’s “dilapidated” and should eventually be demolished.
So he suggests an entirely new stadium should be built for $3-3.4 billion (so, likely $4-5 billion) in Victoria Park, along with sundry other smaller venues to accommodate the various running, jumping and standing still Olympic sports.
Miles, wisely, rejected the new stadium idea. Instead, he says, Suncorp Stadium (Lang Park, as we oldtimers call it) will be the main stadium. Queenslanders have thus dodged a $4 billion bullet.
The thinking behind Quirk’s recommendation, that cities must have what is termed a “top tier international stadium”, is the kind of assumption that is never questioned in the relentless hunger for taxpayer money of “elite” sports. Stadiums may well be the worst infrastructure spending of any kind, given they sit unused for nearly all of their lives — even multi-use stadiums are only used relatively infrequently and provide little or no economic benefit to taxpayers.
The new $830 million (original costing: $730 million) Sydney Football Stadium, on the site of the previous one built in the 1980s, can fit 45,000 people but has never reached capacity, and has averaged fewer than 18,000 at all events since it opened in 2022, including concerts by international performers — sports matches average around 10,000 attendees. Recognising that sporting teams provide poor usage for such an expensive piece of infrastructure located on the doorstep of the Sydney CBD, the NSW government wants to use the stadium more as a concert venue.
At least Miles has declined to follow such spendthrift behaviour. But the smartest thing the incoming LNP government in Queensland could do would be to abandon hosting the Olympics altogether (after another “review”, by a suitably reliable figure) and get out before Queensland starts wasting other money on new facilities and upgrades to existing stadia. There is unlikely to be another opportunity to walk away from wasted infrastructure investment with such political impunity.
Anyone wanting some perspective on the glorious ideals of the Olympic movement should read Andrew Jennings’ now somewhat old journalistic exposés The Lords of the Rings and New Lords of the Rings. The IOC is a never-ending gravy train, on which unelected professional poobahs and the representatives of despotic regimes have cavorted at the expense of gullible city and national governments for decades. Ever since long-standing IOC boss Avery Brundage courted Hitler and since General Franco’s old satrap Samaranch lorded it over the organisation, it has been deeply anti-democratic. Brisbane seems to have won the bid because Brisbane was too clueless to realize why so few other cities want the Olympics these days. Cost blowouts are inevitable and it’s a high price for a two-week sugar hit for AirBnBs. Maybe Dan Andrews should come to Queensland for a short term…
You’d think after the Commonwealth Games it’d be a case of Never Again. Chandler, QE2, et al, still wasting away. And of course the glorious Lang Park is all we need. The rotating venue idea was from back in the day to share the loot and glory around. Maybe time for the Olympics to have a permanent home. Where it all started. Wasn’t it Greece? Greece and concrete sort of go together. Leave it there forever.
Hear hear!
Indeed, and Bernard has been heroically flogging this horse for a decade, and I’m cheering from the sidelines. I feel l some progress is being made! Keep flogging everyone…
Labor in qld is pretty awful, but I’m sure the coalition will manage to outdo them in a worse way.
The Limited News Party’s had so much practice – and a Qld media largely devoted to looking the other way in the face of such as their recidivism.
Rupert’s Bowen Hills Curry or Maul mob even stood to applaud one-termer Newman-Bleijie anti-bikie laws and the slotting of their anti-bikie law fan Tim Carmody to the position of Chief Justice lap-dog : while attacking anyone who came out to publicly cast aspersions on those policies/decisions, from Tony Fitzgerald – who urged Carmody to “not allow his ambition to subvert his personal integrity” – on.
Yeah Campbell Newman comes to mind and how good was he and what did we get out of Campbell Newmans Government? .. Peter Dutton
So glad I don’t pay attention to state politics. Does the coalition still exist in Queensland? Why?
With the carpetbagger as leader they are laydown miseres.
The Olympics attracts megamaggots, parasites, spreading tumours of bludging nobodies…
Also became more a cultural icon of the ageing Australia, the right and RW MSM cartel catering to same ageing Australia & regions with content and nostalgia, but paid for by taxpayers?
Elsewhere, like is happening to the Commonwealth Games, blink and you miss it…. not significant anymore and expensive outlay for white elephants….
Bernard,
There’s only one thing worse than wasting public money on sports infrastructure and that’s the grand prix in Melbourne. Last year $68 million went into building, then dismantling the infrastructure!
By the end of the current contract a total of $3 billion in losses will help keep Victoria in the worst debt situation in Australia.
And the event is propped up with claims on economics and attendances that would make Donald Trump look like an apprentice. I borrowed that assessment form Greg Baum.
Peter
I tried to upvote your post but the site downvoted it instead. Mentally convert it to an upvote.
Quirk, the former Lord Mayor, who decided the Gabba should eventually be demolished in favour of a new stadium in Victoria Park was also a key backer of a zipline and ginormous suspended walkway through the Mt Cootha park. He said it was needed so Brisbane could become a World Class City, but after his sudden retirement, his replacement (Schrinner) immediately nixed the project. I wouldn’t trust anything he says.
But if he’s correct and the Gabba is derelict and should be demolished, then why are we building an underground railway station next to it. We are being led by donkeys here in the Sunshine State.
From a big picture point of view, I think the Courier Mail is souring on the games and once you have lost the Courier Mail, everything gets very difficult
I agree Qld should bail out now.
Every state has their fair share of inept, barnyard animal type leaders. It’s the one thing that unites the states and territories. Apart from the willful neglect of the populus, of course.