Division of Franklin

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Franklin
Australian House of Representatives Division

Franklin, shown within Tasmania
State or territory: Tasmania
Created: 1903
MP: Julie Collins
Party: Labor
Namesake: John Franklin
Electors: 72,542
Area: 7,933 km² (3,062.9 sq mi)
Demographic: Outer Metropolitan

The Division of Franklin is an Australian Electoral Division in Tasmania. The division was created in 1903 and is named for Sir John Franklin, the polar explorer who was Lt Governor of Van Diemen's Land 1843-46. It is located in southern Tasmania, including the Hobart suburbs of Bridgewater, Cygnet, Kingston and Lauderdale. It has always been a reasonably marginal seat, changing hands between the Australian Labor Party and the Liberal Party and its predecessors.

Although after 14 years of representation by former Labor and independent member Harry Quick the seat of Franklin was considered safe Labor, Franklin was one of very few electorates to record a swing to the Liberals at the last election. Franklin also has a strong history of voting for strong candidates rather than for a particular party.

Sitting Labor member Harry Quick announced that he will retire at the 2007 election in 2005. When Labor preselected union official Kevin Harkins as a replacement, Quick, seeing him as unsuitable, appeared to endorse the Liberal candidate, Vanessa Goodwin, which was partly responsible for his expulsion from the Labor party. Harkins was eventually dropped as a candidate, and the Labor Party state secretary Julie Collins was installed as the ALP candidate.

Julie Collins won the seat of Franklin at the 2007 election despite the Labor suffering a 3.11% swing against on two party preferred results and 5.03% swing against in general results. Liberal Party candidate Vanessa Goodwin recorded a swing towards the party while the Australian Greens a swing towards the party similar to that of the Liberals.

[edit] Members

Member Party Term
  William McWilliams Revenue Tariff 19031906
  Anti-Socialist 19061909
  Commonwealth Liberal 19091917
  Nationalist 19171920
  Country 19201922
  Alfred Seabrook Nationalist 19221928
  William McWilliams Independent 19281929
  Charles Frost Labor 1929—1931
  Archibald Blacklow United Australia 19311934
  Charles Frost Labor 19341946
  Charles Falkinder Liberal 19461966
  Thomas Pearsall Liberal 19661969
  Ray Sherry Labor 19691975
  Bruce Goodluck Liberal 19751993
  Harry Quick Labor 19932007
  Independent 20072007
  Julie Collins Labor 2007—present

[edit] Election results

Australian federal election, 2007: Franklin
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Labor Julie Collins 27,990 41.39 -5.03
Liberal Vanessa Goodwin 27,742 41.02 +2.35
Greens Gerard Velnaar 9,769 14.44 +3.26
Family First Gino Papiccio 1,504 2.22 -0.98
Socialist Alliance Matt Holloway 365 0.53 +0.01
Citizens Electoral Council Roger Honey 262 0.39 +0.39
Total formal votes 67,632 97.28 +0.68
Informal votes 1,893 2.72 -0.68
Turnout 69,525 95.84 +0.19
Two Candidate Preferred Result
Labor Julie Collins 36,845 54.48 -3.11
Liberal Vanessa Goodwin 30,787 45.52 +3.11
Labor hold Swing -3.11
Australian federal election, 2004: Franklin
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Labor Harry Quick 29,938 46.42 +0.57
Liberal Henry Finnis 24,936 38.67 +1.11
Greens Mathew Woolley 7,207 11.18 +1.45
Family First Marc Mumford 2,063 3.20 +3.20
Socialist Alliance Glenn Shields 345 0.53 +0.53
Total formal votes 64,489 96.60 -0.40
Informal votes 2,270 3.40 +0.40
Turnout 86,759 95.65 -0.65
Two Candidate Preferred Result
Labor Harry Quick 37,139 57.59 -0.45
Liberal Henry Finnis 27,350 42.41 +0.45
Labor hold Swing -0.45


Electoral divisions of Tasmania

Federal: Bass | Braddon | Denison | Franklin | Lyons

House of Assembly: Bass | Braddon | Denison | Franklin | Lyons

Legislative Council: Apsley | Derwent | Elwick | Huon | Mersey
Montgomery | Murchison | Nelson | Paterson | Pembroke
Rosevears | Rowallan | Rumney | Wellington | Windermere

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