Members of the Australian Senate, 2016–2019

Government (30)
Coalition
     Liberal (21)
     LNP (5)
     National (3)
     CLP (1)

Opposition (26)
     Labor (26)

Crossbench (20)
     Greens (9)
     One Nation (4)
     Xenophon Team (3)
     Family First (1)
     Liberal Democrat (1)
     Lambie (1)
     Hinch (1)

This is a list of members of the Australian Senate as at 1 July 2016. All 76 senators were elected at the 2016 double dissolution election on 2 July 2016. Due to the election being a double dissolution, and not an ordinary half-senate election, the terms of half of the senators representing each of the six states of Australia are allocated six-year terms ending on 30 June 2022 with the remainder allocated three-year terms ending on 30 June 2019. The terms of senators from the States can only be truncated if another double dissolution election is called. The terms of senators from the Australian Capital Territory and the Northern Territory end on the next dissolution of the House of Representatives.

The senate resolved that the first elected six of twelve Senators in each state would serve a six-year term, while the last six elected in each state would serve a three-year term. This decision followed an agreement between Liberal's Mathias Cormann and Labor's Penny Wong to choose the method that benefited their parties at the expense of Lee Rhiannon and Derryn Hinch both being allocated short terms. The alternate method of allocating long and short terms would have given them long terms instead of Labor's Deborah O'Neill and Liberal's Scott Ryan[1][2][3][4][5]

Senator Party State Term commenced Term ends
Hon Eric Abetz Liberal Tasmania 1994 2022
Chris Back Liberal Western Australia 2009 2019
Cory Bernardi Liberal South Australia 2006 2022
Catryna Bilyk Labor Tasmania 2008 2019
Hon Simon Birmingham Liberal South Australia 2007 2022
Hon George Brandis Liberal National b Queensland 2000 2022
Carol Brown Labor Tasmania 2005 2019
Brian Burston One Nation New South Wales 2016 2019
David Bushby Liberal Tasmania 2007 2019
Hon Doug Cameron Labor New South Wales 2008 2019
Hon Matthew Canavan Liberal National c Queensland 2014 2022
Hon Kim Carr Labor Victoria 1993 2022
Hon Michaelia Cash Liberal Western Australia 2008 2022
Anthony Chisholm Labor Queensland 2016 2022
Hon Jacinta Collins Labor Victoria 1995–2005, 2008 2019
Hon Stephen Conroy e Labor Victoria 1996 2016
Hon Mathias Cormann Liberal Western Australia 2007 2022
Rod Culleton One Nation Western Australia 2016 2019
Sam Dastyari Labor New South Wales 2013 2022
Bob Day f Family First South Australia 2014 2016
Richard Di Natale Greens Victoria 2011 2022
Pat Dodson Labor Western Australia 2016 2019
Jonathon Duniam Liberal Tasmania 2016 2019
Hon Don Farrell Labor South Australia 2008–2014, 2016 2022
David Fawcett Liberal South Australia 2011 2019
Hon Concetta Fierravanti-Wells Liberal New South Wales 2005 2019
Hon Mitch Fifield Liberal Victoria 2004 2022
Alex Gallacher Labor South Australia 2011 2019
Katy Gallagher Labor Australian Capital Territory 2015 2019 d
Stirling Griff Xenophon South Australia 2016 2022
Pauline Hanson One Nation Queensland 2016 2022
Sarah Hanson-Young Greens South Australia 2008 2019
Derryn Hinch Justice Victoria 2016 2019
Jane Hume Liberal Victoria 2016 2019
Skye Kakoschke-Moore Xenophon South Australia 2016 2019
Chris Ketter Labor Queensland 2014 2019
Kimberley Kitching e Labor Victoria 2016 2022
Jacqui Lambie Lambie Tasmania 2014 2022
David Leyonhjelm Liberal Democrats New South Wales 2014 2019
Sue Lines Labor Western Australia 2013 2022
Scott Ludlam Greens Western Australia 2008 2022
Hon Ian Macdonald Liberal National b Queensland 1990 2019
Gavin Marshall Labor Victoria 2002 2019
Jenny McAllister Labor New South Wales 2015 2022
Malarndirri McCarthy Labor Northern Territory 2016 2019 d
James McGrath Liberal National b Queensland 2014 2022
Bridget McKenzie National Victoria 2011 2022
Nick McKim Greens Tasmania 2015 2019
Claire Moore Labor Queensland 2002 2019
Hon Fiona Nash National New South Wales 2005 2022
Deborah O'Neill Labor New South Wales 2013 2022
Barry O'Sullivan Liberal National c Queensland 2014 2019
Hon Stephen Parry Liberal Tasmania 2005 2022
James Paterson Liberal Victoria 2016 2019
Hon Marise Payne Liberal New South Wales 1997 2022
Helen Polley Labor Tasmania 2005 2022
Louise Pratt Labor Western Australia 2008–2014, 2016 2019
Linda Reynolds Liberal Western Australia 2014 2019
Lee Rhiannon Greens New South Wales 2011 2019
Janet Rice Greens Victoria 2014 2019
Malcolm Roberts One Nation Queensland 2016 2019
Hon Anne Ruston Liberal South Australia 2012 2019
Hon Scott Ryan Liberal Victoria 2008 2022
Hon Nigel Scullion Country Liberal a Northern Territory 2001 2019 d
Zed Seselja Liberal Australian Capital Territory 2013 2019 d
Rachel Siewert Greens Western Australia 2005 2019
Hon Lisa Singh Labor Tasmania 2011 2019
Hon Arthur Sinodinos Liberal New South Wales 2011 2022
Dean Smith Liberal Western Australia 2012 2022
Glenn Sterle Labor Western Australia 2005 2022
Anne Urquhart Labor Tasmania 2011 2022
Larissa Waters Greens Queensland 2011 2019
Murray Watt Labor Queensland 2016 2022
Peter Whish-Wilson Greens Tasmania 2012 2022
John Williams National New South Wales 2008 2019
Hon Penny Wong Labor South Australia 2002 2022
Nick Xenophon Xenophon South Australia 2008 2022

Notes

a ^ Nigel Scullion, Senator for the Northern Territory, sits as the sole representative of the Country Liberal Party, the local equivalent of both the National and Liberal parties. He sits in the National party room and serves as the National Party leader in the Senate.
b ^ These members of the Liberal National Party (Queensland) sit in the Liberal party room.
c ^ These members of the Liberal National Party (Queensland) sit in the National party room.
d ^ The terms of senators from the Australian Capital Territory and the Northern Territory end on the next dissolution of the House of Representatives.
e ^ Victorian Labor Senator Stephen Conroy resigned on 30 September 2016. Kimberley Kitching was appointed as his replacement on 25 October 2016.
f ^ South Australian Family First Senator Bob Day resigned on 1 November 2016.
Members of the Australian Parliament
House of Representatives

2013–2016  · 2016–2019  · 2019–2022

Senate

2014–2016  · 2016–2019  · 2019–2022

References

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