Victoria, Australia, by-elections in the life of the 57th Parliament (2010-2014) (user search)
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Author Topic: Victoria, Australia, by-elections in the life of the 57th Parliament (2010-2014)  (Read 7846 times)
Smid
Junior Chimp
*****
Posts: 6,151
Australia


« Reply #25 on: May 07, 2012, 03:38:00 AM »

State Member for Melbourne, Bronwyn Pike, resigns from Parliament.

Of course, in Melbourne, the Greens outpolled the Liberals, so it's a marginal Labor vs Green seat. The Electoral Commission always publishes Labor vs Coalition 2PP in the Report into the election, and on that basis the seat becomes very safe Labor. Greens are obviously the bigger threat to Labor in this seat.
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Smid
Junior Chimp
*****
Posts: 6,151
Australia


« Reply #26 on: July 20, 2012, 03:51:29 AM »

So the by-election is tomorrow. The Greens are the firm favourite, but Labor has won it at every election since 1908. Labor has been talking down its chances, leaking an internal poll last week showing them trailing the Greens, and blaming the federal government. Of course, if any electorate can resist a swing against Labor due to the Carbon Tax, it would be this seat, which is entirely within the federal boundaries of the only seat held by the Greens.

ReachTel published a poll with Labor trailing the Greens on primary vote, 38-36, so preferences will play a vital role. The Catholic Church emailed parents with children in Catholic schools, endorsing Labor, due to the Greens policy of refunding church-run schools. The Sex Party also will be preferencing Labor due to"anti-sex morality"from some in the feminist wing of the Greens.

I think Labor I'd talking down their chances so they have a good news story to tell when they scrape across the line in a seat they've held for over a century, but people seem to think the Greens are just about home and hosed. The results will be very interesting, regardless.
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Smid
Junior Chimp
*****
Posts: 6,151
Australia


« Reply #27 on: July 21, 2012, 05:24:41 AM »

Looks like I might be wrong... Labor 31%, Greens 40%. I'm not sure what booths are reporting, though, and the electorate is polarised between Labor and the Greens, plus good Liberal booths in Docklands and East Melbourne, so early results may not reflect final results.

Sex Party 7% and Stephen Mayne 4.5%.

I think North Melbourne East should be good for Labor, but they're trailing there, so that's good news for the Greens. Only it and Parkville returning at this stage.
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Smid
Junior Chimp
*****
Posts: 6,151
Australia


« Reply #28 on: July 21, 2012, 05:30:30 AM »

More booths in, Labor has improved slightly, but only has a plurality in the Gotham Hill booth, which I think was they're strongest both in the General. I think a fair number of housing commission towers in that part of the electorate, but I could be wrong.
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Smid
Junior Chimp
*****
Posts: 6,151
Australia


« Reply #29 on: July 21, 2012, 06:14:21 AM »

The best part of this might be the Sex Party sitting on 7%...

I know! First time they've received their public funding?

I may not be quite so wrong... Labor at 50.37%. Looks like Liberal voters were the most reliable Labor vote, judging from the results in the East Melbourne booth...
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Smid
Junior Chimp
*****
Posts: 6,151
Australia


« Reply #30 on: July 21, 2012, 05:24:25 PM »


Sorry, I didn't mean to come across like that. It's just it really did strike me during the week that groupthink in the media had hyped the Greens to the extent that a win for them wasn't just expected, it was more like it was a foregone conclusion. A Labor win was $3 on Centrebet the other day, which I thought was just ridiculous. That's why I posted on Friday that I thought Labor was talking down their chances so they could make a good news story of a close win. It was always about the preferences and it was the Sex Party that sealed the deal... They backed the Greens at the General, but Labor yesterday. Anyway, when early results had the Greens with a 9 point lead on primary vote, I said I looked like being wrong, so I didn't mean to sound smug or gloating when I said I got it right.
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Smid
Junior Chimp
*****
Posts: 6,151
Australia


« Reply #31 on: July 21, 2012, 05:30:09 PM »

Labor evidently ran a good postal vote campaign... Ordinary votes were very close, prepoll votes were won by the Greens by about a hundred, but Labor got an extra 550 votes compared to the Greens from postal ballots counted last night.
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Smid
Junior Chimp
*****
Posts: 6,151
Australia


« Reply #32 on: July 22, 2012, 03:37:40 AM »
« Edited: July 22, 2012, 06:16:58 AM by Smid »

Sorry, I didn't mean to come across like that.
i

Evidently I didn't either as it was intended as a compliment! Smiley
Ah, good, I was worried I was sounding like I was boasting, and I can't stand people who always say how good they are, especially after the fact, and am always worried that I sound like one of them.

That said, I was proud of my efforts in the last federal election, the subsequent negotiations with the independents after (the Tony Windsor "one of us might need to back down and support the decision of the other two" comment gave it away, I thought), that the minority government would not fall early*, but my best was probably Pauline Hanson's Senate bid in 2001 - I think I was the first I knew that said she wouldn't get it (I thought obvious, because they wouldn't get a quota in their own right and everyone was preferencing against her).

EDIT:*obviously barring a by-election that changes the numbers in the Parliament.
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Smid
Junior Chimp
*****
Posts: 6,151
Australia


« Reply #33 on: July 31, 2012, 10:43:55 PM »

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Smid
Junior Chimp
*****
Posts: 6,151
Australia


« Reply #34 on: July 31, 2012, 11:28:14 PM »

or are the boots just spread out and it's legal to vote at any one as long as you live in the district, thus making actual "precinct results" impossible?

^^^this. The dots are all the same size, but the number of votes cast at them vary, making it somewhat harder to compare. The map is more indicative of roughly where support for the parties was located within the electorate, rather than a particularly scientific approach, like when precinct maps in the US and poll maps in Canada are posted).

At the by-election, the smallest booth was Docklands (pink dot, previously dark red, South-West of the electorate, on the water, where the jutting in bits allow you to correctly assume that it used to be a wharf - now you'd call it a condo development and marina)... Docklands had 786 formal ballots cast.

The largest booth at the by-election was Kensington (the Westernmost booth, went from red to pale green) with 2,428 formal ballots cast.

Larger than any booth were postal votes, which could have come from any part of the electorate with 3,477 formal votes (58.44% Labor) and larger still was pre-poll, again, people could have come from any part of the electorate to vote there (3,832 - 51.3% Green).

Reading the small print on the image (you may want to view it in the gallery), I have the booth locations for the general election, but not the by-election... I've had to assume that they haven't moved, except for North Melbourne Central, which is abolished, and South Kensington, which is created - probably roughly the same area, just slightly further to the West, although it's difficult to analyse the impact on neighbouring booths - whether Kensington lost some voters to South Kensington, and whether North Melbourne and North Melbourne East gained voters from North Melbourne Central - due to the substantially lower turnout).
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Smid
Junior Chimp
*****
Posts: 6,151
Australia


« Reply #35 on: February 17, 2013, 03:45:34 PM »

Tim Holding announced his retirement on Friday - yesterday's newspaper suggested that Martin Pakula may make the switch from Upper House to Lower House.
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Smid
Junior Chimp
*****
Posts: 6,151
Australia


« Reply #36 on: March 01, 2013, 09:16:50 PM »
« Edited: March 07, 2013, 06:00:42 PM by Smid »

The Lyndhurst by-election date has been set for 27 April. Nominations close 28 March.

Edit: Antony Green has a write-up
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Smid
Junior Chimp
*****
Posts: 6,151
Australia


« Reply #37 on: March 17, 2013, 08:24:06 PM »

Martin Pakula won Labor preselection on Friday. There was an article in the paper on Thursday about an internal battle going on about it (basically, the Opposition Leader is apparently threatened by him entering the Lower House and was encouraging someone else to challenge, despite a deal that seat "belonged" to Pakula's faction).
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Smid
Junior Chimp
*****
Posts: 6,151
Australia


« Reply #38 on: April 28, 2013, 05:16:32 PM »

Lyndhurst by-election was held on Saturday. Labor held onto the seat with a significant primary vote swing against.
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