Division of Swan
Swan Australian House of Representatives Division | |
---|---|
Created | 1901 |
MP | Zaneta Mascarenhas |
Party | Labor |
Namesake | Swan River |
Electors | 121,335 (2022) |
Area | 134 km2 (51.7 sq mi) |
Demographic | Inner metropolitan |
The Division of Swan is an Australian electoral division located in Western Australia.
Swan is a marginal electorate that has swung between both major political parties in the past two decades. It extends across the Swan River from central Perth, and covers most of the area between the Swan and Canning Rivers.[1]
The seat includes a mix of incomes and housing types, from low-price flats to affluent suburbs with Swan River views.[1] The electorate includes the campus of Curtin University, the Welshpool and Kewdale industrial areas, and Perth Airport.[1] Swan covers 151 sq. kilometres.[1]
The current MP is Zaneta Mascarenhas, a member of the Australian Labor Party. She was elected in the 2022 election.
History
[edit]The division was one of the original 65 divisions contested at the first federal election in 1901. It was one of five electorates created by the Federal House of Representatives Western Australian Electorates Act 1900, an act of the parliament of Western Australia.[2] The original bill introduced by Premier John Forrest provided for the seat to be named "Occidental" rather than Swan.[3]
Historically, the electorate was a country seat extending north to Dongara, east to Merredin and south to the coast. It contracted to an area east of the Darling Range and became a safe Country Party seat. Prior to the 1949 election, its old area became the new seat of Moore, while Swan moved into approximately its present position, although initially extending as far north-east as Midland.[citation needed]
For several decades, Swan has been a marginal seat, extending along the Swan and Canning Rivers from the affluent suburbs in the City of South Perth to the west, which typically vote for the Liberal Party, to the City of Belmont to the east and parts of the City of Canning to the south-east, which are more working-class in orientation and typically vote for the Labor Party. From 2004 to 2007 it was the third most marginal electorate in Australia, after Hindmarsh and Kingston, with the ALP incumbent Kim Wilkie winning 50.08 percent of the two-party-preferred vote in 2004. A redistribution ahead of the 2010 election added the strongly Labor-voting suburb of Langford, which was previously within Tangney, which made it a notionally Labor seat. Langford was redistributed to Burt in 2016.[citation needed]
At the 2007 election, Liberal candidate Steve Irons won the seat with a swing of 0.19 percent.[4] Irons was the only Coalition challenger to unseat a Labor incumbent at the 2007 election. However, the election came at a very bad time for the state Labor government, which was only polling at 49 percent support at the time the writs were dropped. Irons was re-elected with a slightly increased majority in 2010, making it a fairly safe Liberal seat. Following the 2016 election Labor candidate Tammy Solonec managed to return Swan to marginal status.
Steve Irons retained the seat in the 2019 election.[5] Hannah Beazley contested the seat for Labor but ultimately conceded defeat.[5] After Steve Iron's retirement at the 2022 Australian federal election, the seat was contested by Kristy McSweeney from the Liberal Party. She was defeated by Zaneta Mascarenhas from the Labor Party.[6]
Geography
[edit]Since 1984, federal electoral division boundaries in Australia have been determined at redistributions by a redistribution committee appointed by the Australian Electoral Commission. Redistributions occur for the boundaries of divisions in a particular state, and they occur every seven years, or sooner if a state's representation entitlement changes or when divisions of a state are malapportioned.[7]
In August 2021, the Australian Electoral Commission (AEC) announced that Swan would lose the suburb of Wilson to the seat of Tangney and gain the suburbs of Maida Vale and Wattle Grove and the remainder of Forrestfield and High Wycombe from the seat of Hasluck. These boundary changes took place as of the 2022 election.[8]
Swan is bordered by the Swan River in the north and west, the Canning River and the City of Canning in the south, and Roe Highway, Great Eastern Highway and Perth Airport in the east. Suburbs include:[9]
- South Guildford (part)
Members
[edit]Election results
[edit]Party | Candidate | Votes | % | ±% | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Labor | Zaneta Mascarenhas | 39,082 | 39.07 | +6.17 | |
Liberal | Kristy McSweeney | 32,096 | 32.08 | −12.65 | |
Greens | Clint Uink | 14,861 | 14.86 | +2.86 | |
United Australia | Paul Hilton | 2,637 | 2.64 | +0.81 | |
One Nation | Peter Hallifax | 2,544 | 2.54 | −0.33 | |
Animal Justice | Timothy Green | 2,214 | 2.21 | +0.89 | |
Western Australia | Rod Bradley | 2,059 | 2.06 | +0.70 | |
Christians | Dena Gower | 1,930 | 1.93 | +0.20 | |
Liberal Democrats | Matthew Thompson | 1,821 | 1.82 | +1.82 | |
Australian Federation | Carl Pallier | 792 | 0.79 | +0.79 | |
Total formal votes | 100,036 | 94.75 | +0.59 | ||
Informal votes | 5,545 | 5.25 | −0.59 | ||
Turnout | 105,581 | 87.12 | −1.73 | ||
Two-party-preferred result | |||||
Labor | Zaneta Mascarenhas | 58,796 | 58.77 | +11.99 | |
Liberal | Kristy McSweeney | 41,240 | 41.23 | −11.99 | |
Labor gain from Liberal | Swing | +11.99 |
References
[edit]- ^ a b c d "Swan (Key Seat) - Federal Electorate, Candidates, Results". abc.net.au. Retrieved 16 June 2022.
- ^ "Federal House of Representatives Western Australian Electorates Act 1900". Western Australian Legislation. Government of Western Australia. Retrieved 24 July 2024.
- ^ Black, David (2010). "Changing boundaries". The Federal Electorate of Fremantle: A History Since 1901. John Curtin Prime Ministerial Library. Retrieved 24 July 2024.
- ^ 2007 Federal Election results (Declared 12/12/07)
- ^ a b "Federal election 2019 Swan result". Community News Group. 19 May 2019. Retrieved 23 June 2019.
- ^ Green, Antony. "Swan (Key Seat) - Federal Election 2022". ABC News. Retrieved 21 May 2022.
- ^ Muller, Damon (14 November 2017). "The process of federal redistributions: a quick guide". Parliament of Australia. Retrieved 19 April 2022.
- ^ https://www.aec.gov.au/Electorates/Redistributions/2021/wa/files/redistribution-of-western-australia-into-electoral-divisions-august-2021.pdf [bare URL PDF]
- ^ "Profile of the electoral division of Swan (WA)". Australian Electoral Commission. Retrieved 24 April 2016.
- ^ Swan, WA, 2022 Tally Room, Australian Electoral Commission.