Division of Melbourne

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Melbourne
Australian House of Representatives Division
State or territory: Victoria
Created: 1901
MP: Lindsay Tanner
Party: Labor
Namesake: Melbourne, Victoria
Electors: 98,449
Area: 53 km² (20.5 sq mi)
Demographic: Inner Metropolitan

The Division of Melbourne is an Australian Electoral Division of Victoria.

Created at Federation in 1900 the division was one of the original 75 divisions contested at the first federal election. Melbourne division encompasses the City of Melbourne and the suburbs of Abbotsford, Ascot Vale, Carlton, Clifton Hill, Colllingwood, Docklands, North Melbourne, West Melbourne, East Melbourne, Fitzroy, Fitzroy North, Flemington, Kensington, Parkville and Richmond. Brunswick and Brunswick East is shared with the Division of Wills. The area has heavy and light engineering, extensive manufacturing, commercial and retail activities (including Melbourne markets and central business district), dockyards, clothing and footwear industries, warehousing and distributing of whitegoods, building and other general goods.

This capital city electorate's northern boundary is formed by Maribyrnong Road, Ormond Road, Park Street, Sydney Road and Glenlyon Road between the Yarra River, Maribyrnong River and Merri Creek.

Traditionally a safe Labor seat, Melbourne has been held by the ALP since 1904, with former Opposition Leader Arthur Calwell the highest profile member. At the 2007 election, Melbourne became a marginal seat for the first time, with the Greens taking second place on a two candidate preferred basis, leaving Labor with 54.71 percent of the vote. On a two party preferred basis with the Liberals, Labor finished with 72.27, an increase of 1.13 percent.[1][2]

[edit] Members

Member Party Term
  Malcolm McEacharn Protectionist 19011904
  William Maloney Labor 1904—1940
  Arthur Calwell Labor 19401972
  Ted Innes Labor 19721983
  Gerry Hand Labor 19831993
  Lindsay Tanner Labor 1993—present

[edit] Election results

Australian federal election, 2007: Melbourne
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Labor Lindsay Tanner 43,363 49.51 -2.27
Liberal Andrea Del Ciotto 20,577 23.49 -1.60
Greens Adam Bandt 19,967 22.80 +3.82
Democrats Tim Wright 1,255 1.43 -0.20
Family First Georgia Pearson 878 1.00 +0.12
Citizens Electoral Council Andrew Reed 586 0.67 +0.49
Kylie McGregor 539 0.62 +0.62
Socialist Equality Will Marshall 418 0.48 +0.48
Total formal votes 87,583 97.20 +0.47
Informal votes 2,521 2.80 -0.47
Turnout 90,104 91.52 +0.45
Two Candidate Preferred Result
Labor Lindsay Tanner 47,916 54.71 -16.43
Greens Adam Bandt 39,667 45.29 +45.29
Labor hold Swing -16.43
Australian federal election, 2004: Melbourne
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Labor Lindsay Tanner 42,047 51.78 +4.35
Liberal Jerry Dimitroulis 20,374 25.09 +0.05
Greens Gemma Pinnell 15,416 18.98 +3.21
Democrats Angela Williams 1,326 1.63 -8.01
Family First Chris Willis 718 0.88 +0.88
Socialist Alliance Zoe Kenny 619 0.76 +0.76
Independent Steven Anger 559 0.69 +0.69
Citizens Electoral Council Rhys McGuckin 145 0.18 +0.17
Total formal votes 81,204 96.73 +0.45
Informal votes 2,741 3.27 -0.45
Turnout 83,945 91.07 +0.55
Two Candidate Preferred Result
Labor Lindsay Tanner 57,766 71.14 +1.26
Liberal Jerry Dimitroulis 23,438 28.86 -1.26
Labor hold Swing +1.26

[edit] References

  1. ^ The Two Party Preferred distribution for the division of Melbourne was published on the VTR at 12pm, Thursday, 10/1/2008. The Two Party Preferred percentage and swing for Melbourne, Victoria and Nationally has changed to reflect this data.[1]
  2. ^ Division of Melbourne - AEC