Swan Australian House of Representatives Division |
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Division of Swan (green) in Western Australia |
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Created: | 1900 |
MP: | Steve Irons |
Party: | Liberal |
Namesake: | Swan River |
Area: | 126 km² (49 sq mi) |
Demographic: | Inner Metropolitan |
The Division of Swan is an Australian Electoral Division located in Western Australia. The division is named after the Swan River.
For several decades, it has been a marginal seat, extending along the Swan and Canning Rivers from the affluent suburbs in the City of South Perth to the west, which typically vote for the Liberal Party, to the City of Belmont to the east and parts of the City of Canning to the south-east, which are more working-class in orientation and typically vote for the Labor Party. A redistribution ahead of the 2010 election has added the strongly Labor-voting suburb of Langford, which was previously within Tangney, which has made it a notionally Labor seat.
The division was one of the original 75 divisions contested at the first federal election. Historically, the electorate was a country seat extending north to Dongara, east to Merredin and south to the coast. It contracted to an area east of the Darling Range and became a safe Country Party seat. Prior to the 1949 election, its old area became the new seat of Moore, while Swan moved into approximately its present position, although initially extending as far north-east as Midland.
From 2004 to 2007 it was the third most marginal electorate in Australia, after Hindmarsh and Kingston, with the ALP incumbent Kim Wilkie winning 50.08% of the two-party-preferred vote in 2004.
In the 2007 election, Liberal candidate Steve Irons won the seat with a swing of 0.19%.[1]
Member | Party | Term | |
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John Forrest | Protectionist | 1901–1909 | |
Commonwealth Liberal | 1909–1916 | ||
Nationalist | 1916–1918 | ||
Edwin Corboy | Labor | 1918–1919 | |
John Prowse | Country | 1919–1922 | |
Henry Gregory | Country | 1922–1940 | |
Thomas Marwick | Country | 1940–1943 | |
Independent Country | 1943–1943 | ||
Donald Mountjoy | Labor | 1943–1946 | |
Leonard Hamilton | Country | 1946–1949 | |
Bill Grayden | Liberal | 1949–1954 | |
Harry Webb | Labor | 1954–1955 | |
Richard Cleaver | Liberal | 1955–1969 | |
Adrian Bennett | Labor | 1969–1975 | |
John Martyr | Liberal | 1975–1980 | |
Kim Beazley | Labor | 1980–1996 | |
Don Randall | Liberal | 1996–1998 | |
Kim Wilkie | Labor | 1998–2007 | |
Steve Irons | Liberal | 2007–present |
Australian federal election, 2010: Swan | |||||
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Party | Candidate | Votes | % | ±% | |
Liberal | Steve Irons | 36,951 | 46.51 | +2.76 | |
Labor | Tim Hammond | 28,023 | 35.28 | -5.69 | |
Greens | Rebecca Leighton | 9,380 | 11.81 | +1.69 | |
Sex Party | Bret Treasure | 2,060 | 2.59 | +2.59 | |
Christian Democrats | Steve Klomp | 1,646 | 2.07 | +0.30 | |
Family First | Barry Drennan | 981 | 1.23 | +0.38 | |
Socialist Equality | Joe Lopez | 398 | 0.50 | +0.30 | |
Total formal votes | 79,439 | 95.10 | -0.36 | ||
Informal votes | 4,089 | 4.90 | +0.36 | ||
Turnout | 83,528 | 92.03 | -0.97 | ||
Two-candidate preferred result | |||||
Liberal | Steve Irons | 41,729 | 52.53 | +2.80 | |
Labor | Tim Hammond | 37,710 | 47.47 | -2.80 | |
Liberal gain from Labor | Swing | +2.80 |
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