The Queensland Premier has told the Labor Party faithful gathered in northern New South Wales that Opposition Leader Luke Foley can replicate her victory in the election.

Annastacia Palaszczuk has helped Mr Foley officially launch Labor's North Coast campaign at Banora Point, after he spent two days campaigning in the Ballina, Lismore and Tweed seats he hopes to take from the Nationals.

The Queensland Premier told the crowd that New South Wales faced many of the issues that drew voters to Labor at the Queensland election in January.

The Liberal National Party's plan to lease state-owned assets was a hot topic during the Queensland election and part of the reason Labor were able to claw back into government from just nine seats before the election.

Ms Palaszczuk said she had been told that her party had no chance of defeating the one-term, 74-seat-strong LNP.

"I stand here today as living proof that pessimists got it wrong and we got it right," she said to applause.

"I stand here today with a very simple message: It can happen here in NSW as well."

During its visit to the North Coast, Labor pledged to spend $211 million on a major redevelopment of the Tweed Hospital if it was elected

Amongst other things, the funds would be used to upgrade the emergency department and add another 140 beds.

The Liberal Government has already promised $48 million for the project, but Mr Foley said that was not enough.

"That will get a little bit done," he said.

"But it won't get the job done that's needed here. So Labor's making a much fuller commitment."

Mr Foley acknowledged that he was allocating a large chunk of the $1.7 billion he set aside for hospital infrastructure across the state to the Tweed.

But he denied he was throwing money at the town because he thought he could win the seat, arguing Tweed has one of the state's busiest hospitals, treating about 48,000 patients a year.

"This isn't a country town, we're in the sixth largest city in Australia," Mr Foley said.

"It needs investment, it needs major redevelopment."

"And you know what?" he continued, "It comes without the privatisation of electricity. So many of the Liberals and Nationals infrastructure policies are conditional on the people agreeing to the sell off of the electricity network."

Mr Foley welcomed news the Liberal Government was cancelling a coal seam gas license that stretched over much of Sydney, but he said it was playing catch up in the home straight to the election because it was worried it would lose votes over the issue.