Ms Cunningham, who has always supported the need for a Queensland house of review, was sacked from the the parliamentary Crime and Misconduct Commission oversight committee, along with the rest of its members, last month. Following the controversial motion, Ms Cunningham and fellow PCMC member and independent MP Peter Wellington called for an upper house to be established to protect the integrity of the parliamentary process from politics. But Mr Borbidge said he now believed Queenslanders had no appetite for a Legislative Council. “When we gave it consideration early in the term of our government, it was just clear that people would not accept the idea,” he said. “They don't want it, they don't want more politicians, they think we have too many politicians already, so the idea of creating an upper chamber full or politicians is something that I think is anathema to the electorate.

“I think the committee system works well, from my observations. No system at the end of the day is perfect, but I think the system we have in Queensland is certainly as good as anywhere else in Australia and I think it is better than having an upper house.” Mr Borbidge said upper houses were “not covering themselves in glory at the moment” as it was. “There is lots of concern about what has recently happened in the Senate, what's happened in terms of the NSW upper house and there is a feeling in the electorate it is not the solution to providing improved parliamentary accountability,” he said. “Where you have an upper house, I think it is important to try and make it work – but where you don't have an upper house, I just don't think there is the support, or the will or the desire within the electorate to have more politicians.” He said the government was right to sack the PCMC.

“I have full support for the way the government handled the issue,” he said. “Inevitably, if you had parliamentary committees where non-government MPs are in a majority, those non-government MPs will be seeking to make life difficult for the government. “It is just politics “In my view, I think the government handled the whole thing quite appropriately.” As for the persistent rumours that Mr Borbidge will become the state's next representative to the Queen when Governor Penelope Wensley's term expires in July 2014, the state's 35th premier had a laugh and a polite “no comment”.

“I only know what I have read,” he said. “I really don't know and can't comment. That is a matter, a decision for the premier to make in due course and for him to make a recommendation to the Queen, but I've not discussed the matter with anyone, aside from interested journalists.” Queensland's upper house was abolished in 1922, following a campaign by the Labor party. A parliamentary committee review system, made up of both government and opposition members, was put in its place.