Electoral division of Johnston

Johnston
Northern TerritoryLegislative Assembly

Location of Johnston in the Darwin/Palmerston area
Territory Northern Territory
Created 2001
MP Ken Vowles
Party Australian Labor Party
Namesake Eric Johnston
Electors 4,879 (2012)
Area 4 km2 (1.5 sq mi)
Demographic Urban

Johnston is an electoral division of the Legislative Assembly in Australia's Northern Territory. It was first created in 2001, replacing the abolished Jingili electorate, and is named after Commodore Eric Johnston, a former Administrator of the Northern Territory. Johnston is an urban electorate, covering only 4 km² and taking in the Darwin suburbs of Jingili, Moil, Wagaman and part of Alawa. There were 4,879 people enrolled within the electorate as of August 2012.

Johnston was essentially a reconfigured version of one of the original electorates in the Northern Territory, Jingili, which had been held by the Country Liberal Party for its entire existence and was the seat of the Territory's second head of government, Paul Everingham. At the 2001 election, however, the CLP member for Jingili, Steve Balch, was defeated by Australian Labor Party challenger Dr Chris Burns. Burns' victory was part of an unexpected Labor wave that swept through Darwin, allowing Labor to win government in the Territory for the first time. The area's CLP voting history led many commentators to suggest that it was likely to revert to the CLP at the 2005 election. As it turned out, Burns was re-elected easily amid that year's Labor landslide, with a substantially increased majority—although not as much as in similar electorates nearby. Burns retired at the 2012 election, and the seat was retained for Labor by former cricketer Ken Vowles with only a small swing against Labor--suggesting that it is now a marginal Labor seat.

Members for Johnston

MemberPartyTerm
  Chris Burns Labor 2001–2012
  Ken Vowles Labor 2012–present

Election results

Northern Territory general election, 2012: Johnston[1]
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Labor Ken Vowles 1,799 45.0 −13.1
Country Liberal Jo Sangster 1,552 38.8 −3.1
Greens Alana Parrott-Jolly 389 9.7 +9.7
Sex Party Krystal Metcalf 169 4.2 +4.2
Peter Bussa 89 2.2 +2.2
Total formal votes 3,998 96.2 +1.2
Informal votes 160 2.5 −1.2
Turnout 4,158 85.2 +2.7
Two-party-preferred result
Labor Ken Vowles 2,225 55.7 −2.5
Country Liberal Jo Sangster 1,773 44.3 +2.5
Labor hold Swing −2.5

References

External links

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