Electoral district of Giles
Giles South Australia—House of Assembly | |
---|---|
Electoral district of Giles (green) in South Australia | |
State | South Australia |
Created | 1993 |
MP | Eddie Hughes |
Party | Australian Labor Party (SA) |
Namesake | Ernest Giles |
Electors | 22,712 (2014) |
Area | 493,365 km2 (190,489.3 sq mi) |
Demographic | Rural |
Coordinates | 29°39′S 133°52′E / 29.650°S 133.867°ECoordinates: 29°39′S 133°52′E / 29.650°S 133.867°E |
Giles is an electoral district of the House of Assembly in the Australian state of South Australia. The largest electorate in the state, named after explorer Ernest Giles, covers a 493,365 km² swathe of South Australian outback. Its main population centre is the industrial town of Whyalla on the far south-east border of the seat which represents half of the seat's voters. The remaining half covers significant areas of pastoral leases and Pitjantjatjara Aboriginal land stretching to the Western Australian and Northern Territory borders, taking in the remote towns of Andamooka, Coober Pedy, Hawker, Iron Knob, Kimba, Quorn, Roxby Downs and Woomera. Giles also has a far north mobile booth.
Giles was created at the 1991 electoral redistribution to replace the abolished seat of Whyalla. It covered an area that had traditionally been one of the few country areas where Labor consistently did well. Support for the party was particularly strong in the city of Whyalla, which had been a Labor bastion for the better part of the 20th century. Labor also had longstanding support in remote mining towns and indigenous communities. Sitting Labor MP for Whyalla and incumbent government minister Frank Blevins won his seat at the 1989 election with a safe 10.9 percent two-party margin.
However, upon the creation of Giles, Labor's two-party margin was halved to a notionally marginal 5.2 percent. The seat became even more marginal at the 1993 election landslide, as Blevins saw his margin cut in half to 2.4 percent. Giles remained as Labor's only rural seat at the 1993 election which saw Labor win just 10 seats total, until Labor also won the rural seat of Light from the Liberals at the 2006 election landslide which they have retained since.
At the 1997 election Giles was massively expanded beyond just Whyalla, stretching to the Western Australia and Northern Territory borders, taking in the western half of the abolished seat of Eyre, with the eastern half going to the Port Augusta-based seat of Stuart. At this election, Blevins retired, and his successor, Lyn Breuer, picked up a large swing, turning Giles into a safe Labor seat once again.
Breuer made the seat fairly secure for Labor at subsequent elections before retiring from politics at the 2014 election, with Labor candidate Eddie Hughes retaining the seat.
Members for Giles
Member | Party | Term | |
---|---|---|---|
Frank Blevins | Labor | 1993–1997 | |
Lyn Breuer | Labor | 1997–2014 | |
Eddie Hughes | Labor | 2014–present | |
Election results
South Australian state election, 2014: Giles[1][2] | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Party | Candidate | Votes | % | ±% | |
Labor | Eddie Hughes | 9,800 | 51.4 | −1.2 | |
Liberal | Bernadette Abraham | 7,134 | 37.4 | +8.1 | |
Family First | Cheryl Kaminski | 1,196 | 6.3 | +0.3 | |
Greens | Alison Sentance | 942 | 4.9 | −7.2 | |
Total formal votes | 19,072 | 97.0 | +0.6 | ||
Informal votes | 581 | 3.0 | −0.6 | ||
Turnout | 19,653 | 86.5 | −1.6 | ||
Two-party-preferred result | |||||
Labor | Eddie Hughes | 10,877 | 57.0 | −4.9 | |
Liberal | Bernadette Abraham | 8,195 | 43.0 | +4.9 | |
Labor hold | Swing | −4.9 | |||
Notes
References
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