Division of Lindsay

Lindsay
Australian House of Representatives Division

Division of Lindsay in New South Wales, as of the 2016 federal election.
Created 1984
MP Emma Husar
Party Labor
Namesake Norman Lindsay
Electors 109,779 (2016)
Area 339 km2 (130.9 sq mi)
Demographic Outer Metropolitan

The Division of Lindsay is an Australian electoral division in the state of New South Wales. The division is named after Sir Norman Lindsay, the prominent Australian artist, writer and sculptor. The division was proclaimed at the redistribution of 11 October 1984 and was first contested at the 1984 federal election.

The division is located in the outer western suburbs of Sydney, and is centred on Penrith. It also includes the suburbs of Berkshire Park, Cambridge Gardens, Cambridge Park, Castlereagh, Claremont Meadows, Colyton, Cranebrook, Dunheved, Emu Heights, Emu Plains, Glenmore Park, Jamisontown, Jordan Springs, Kingswood, Kingswood Park, Lemongrove, Leonay, Llandilo, Londonderry, Mount Pleasant, North St Marys, Oxley Park, Regentville, South Penrith, St Marys, Werrington, Werrington County, and Werrington Downs; as well as parts of Agnes Banks, Badgerys Creek, Luddenham, Mulgoa, and Orchard Hills.

Ever since Lindsay was first contested at the 1984 federal election the seat had always elected a member of the government of the day − a pattern known as a "bellwether" seat. However, Lindsay's bellwether run ended at the 2016 federal election when Labor's Emma Husar defeated one-term Liberal Fiona Scott. Ahead of the 2016 election, ABC psephologist Antony Green listed Lindsay in his election guide as one of eleven which he classed a bellwether electorate.[1]

History

The Division of Lindsay has bellwether status. At every federal election since its creation in 1984, its winning member of parliament has been from the party winning government. This has been widely attributed to Lindsay's buildup as an economically sensitive seat. The mortgage belt status of the electorate means fiscal matters such as interest rates, job security, petrol prices and quality of transportation are always critical issues at federal elections. The geographic buildup of the seat consists of Liberal voting areas in the west, Labor voting areas in the east and swing areas in the centre.

Prior to the 1996 election, it was considered a safe Labor seat, as it was located in Labor's longstanding heartland of west Sydney. This ended in 1996, when then member Ross Free was thrown from office by Liberal challenger Jackie Kelly on a swing of nearly 12 percent. Free was one of 13 New South Wales Labor MPs to lose their seats in Labor's heavy defeat that year. However a by-election was called when it was revealed that questions about Kelly's citizenship raised eligibility problems. Kelly won the subsequent by-election with an additional 6.69% swing towards her.

Kelly announced her retirement in 2007 which, together with the 2006 redistribution, made Lindsay vulnerable to the Labor candidate, Penrith Mayor David Bradbury. In his third bid for the seat, Bradbury won with a swing of 9.7% after distribution of preferences, defeating the unsuccessful Liberal candidate Karen Chijoff. Three days before the 2007 federal election Liberal Party supporters, including Jackie Kelly's husband, were caught in Lindsay distributing fake pamphlets in residents' letterboxes which linked the Labor Party to Islamic terrorism. For more details see Lindsay pamphlet scandal. Bradbury narrowly retained the seat in 2010 against Liberal Fiona Scott, but she defeated him at the 2013 election receiving a favourable swing towards her in both elections of 5.16% in 2010 and 4.11% in 2013.

However, the bellwether streak ended at the 2016 federal election as a result of Labor's Emma Husar defeating Scott.

Members

MemberPartyTerm
  Ross Free Labor 1984–1996
  Jackie Kelly Liberal 1996–2007
  David Bradbury Labor 2007–2013
  Fiona Scott Liberal 2013–2016
  Emma Husar Labor 2016–present

Election results

Australian federal election, 2016: Lindsay[2]
Party Candidate Votes % ±
Labor Emma Husar 36,675 41.08 +2.05
Liberal Fiona Scott 35,081 39.30 −7.35
Greens Kingsley Liu 3,199 3.58 +0.52
Christian Democrats Warren Wormald 2,701 3.03 +0.24
Marcus Cornish 2,128 2.38 +2.38
Liberty Alliance Stephen Roddick 2,110 2.36 +2.36
Xenophon Stephen Lynch 1,850 2.07 +2.07
Family First Linda La Brooy 1,513 1.69 +1.69
Justice Scott Grimley 1,497 1.68 +1.68
Animal Justice Deborah Blundell 1,454 1.63 +1.63
Australia First Jim Saleam 1,068 1.20 +0.50
Total formal votes 89,276 88.23 −3.56
Informal votes 11,913 11.77 +3.56
Turnout 101,189 92.18 −2.11
Two-party-preferred result
Labor Emma Husar 45,633 51.11 +4.10
Liberal Fiona Scott 43,643 48.89 −4.10
Labor gain from Liberal Swing +4.10

References

  1. The Bellwether Contests: Antony Green ABC
  2. Lindsay, NSW, Virtual Tally Room 2016, Australian Electoral Commission.

External links

Coordinates: 33°45′04″S 150°42′40″E / 33.751°S 150.711°E / -33.751; 150.711

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 11/29/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.