Division of Moreton
Moreton Australian House of Representatives Division | |
---|---|
Division of Moreton (green) within Queensland | |
Created | 1901 |
MP | Graham Perrett |
Party | Labor |
Namesake | Moreton Bay |
Electors | 94,288 (2013) |
Area | 111 km2 (42.9 sq mi) |
Demographic | Inner Metropolitan |
The Division of Moreton is an Australian Electoral Division in Queensland. The division was one of the original 75 divisions contested at the first federal election. It is named after Moreton Bay, though successive redistributions have resulted in it no longer bordering the bay; it is now completely landlocked. Nonetheless, it has retained the name of Moreton, mainly because the Australian Electoral Commission's guidelines on electoral redistributions require it to preserve the names of original electorates where possible.[1]
The seat was in the hands of the Liberal Party and its predecessors for 86 years before Labor regained it in 1990. From then until 2013, it was a bellwether seat, voting for the winning party in every election.
The seat is known for having decided the 1961 federal election. The Liberals only won the seat by 130 votes to give the Coalition a bare one-seat majority; had 93 Communist preferences gone the other way, it would have resulted in a hung parliament.
On its current boundaries, the seat is very multicultural, with a significant Asian, South Eastern European and African population living in the electorate.
Boundaries
Moreton is located in south east Queensland, and is based in the southern suburbs of the City of Brisbane. The division includes Archerfield, Chelmer, Fairfield, Graceville, Karawatha, Kuraby, Macgregor, Moorooka, Nathan, Oxley, Robertson, Rocklea, Runcorn, Salisbury, Stretton, Sunnybank, Sunnybank Hills, Tennyson, Yeronga, and Yeerongpilly, and parts of Algester, Berrinba, Calamvale, Coopers Plains, Drewvale, Eight Mile Plains, Parkinson, Sherwood, and Tarragindi, Corinda.
Members
Member | Party | Term | |
---|---|---|---|
James Wilkinson | Independent Labour | 1901–1904 | |
Labour | 1904–1906 | ||
Hugh Sinclair | Anti-Socialist | 1906–1909 | |
Commonwealth Liberal | 1909–1917 | ||
Nationalist | 1917–1919 | ||
Arnold Wienholt | Nationalist | 1919–1922 | |
Josiah Francis | Nationalist | 1922–1931 | |
United Australia | 1931–1944 | ||
Liberal | 1944–1955 | ||
(Sir) James Killen | Liberal | 1955–1983 | |
Donald Milner Cameron | Liberal | 1983–1990 | |
Garrie Gibson | Labor | 1990–1996 | |
Gary Hardgrave | Liberal | 1996–2007 | |
Graham Perrett | Labor | 2007–present |
Election results
Australian federal election, 2013: Moreton | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Party | Candidate | Votes | % | ±% | |
Liberal National | Malcolm Cole | 34,824 | 42.24 | −1.16 | |
Labor | Graham Perrett | 31,932 | 38.73 | +2.72 | |
Greens | Elissa Jenkins | 8,234 | 9.99 | −5.90 | |
Palmer United | Jeremy Davey | 4,147 | 5.03 | +5.03 | |
Family First | Carolyn Ferrando | 1,250 | 1.52 | −1.92 | |
Katter's Australian | Chris Mallcott | 1,070 | 1.30 | +1.30 | |
Future | Hayden Muscat | 481 | 0.58 | +0.58 | |
Rise Up Australia | Bruce Fry | 303 | 0.37 | +0.37 | |
CEC | Wayne Grunert | 208 | 0.25 | +0.25 | |
Total formal votes | 82,449 | 94.38 | −0.77 | ||
Informal votes | 4,912 | 5.62 | +0.77 | ||
Turnout | 87,361 | 92.65 | +0.78 | ||
Two-party-preferred result | |||||
Labor | Graham Perrett | 42,503 | 51.55 | +0.42 | |
Liberal National | Malcolm Cole | 39,946 | 48.45 | −0.42 | |
Labor hold | Swing | +0.42 | |||
References
- ↑ "Guidelines for naming divisions". Australian Electoral Commission. 20 July 2011. Retrieved 30 March 2013.
External links
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Coordinates: 27°33′50″S 153°01′52″E / 27.564°S 153.031°E