Australian federal election, 2010

Australian federal election, 2010
Australia
21 August 2010 (2010-08-21)

All 150 seats in the Australian House of Representatives
76 seats were needed for a majority in the House
40 (of the 76) seats in the Australian Senate
  First party Second party
 
Leader Julia Gillard Tony Abbott
Party Labor Liberal/National coalition
Leader since 24 June 2010 (2010-06-24) 1 December 2009 (2009-12-01)
Leader's seat Lalor Warringah
Last election 83 seats, 43.38% 65 seats, 41.95%
Seats won 72 seats 72 seats
Seat change Decrease11 Increase7
Popular vote 4,711,363 5,365,529
Percentage 37.99% 43.32%
Swing Decrease5.40 Increase1.16
TPP 50.12% 49.88%
TPP swing Decrease2.58 Increase2.58

  Third party Fourth party
 
Leader Bob Brown
Party Greens Nationals WA
Leader since 28 November 2005 (2005-11-28)
Leader's seat Senator for Tasmania
Last election 0 seats, 7.79% 0 seats, 0.14%
Seats won 1 seat 1 seat
Seat change Increase1 Increase1
Popular vote 1,458,998 43,101
Percentage 11.76% 0.34%
Swing Increase3.97 Increase0.20


Prime Minister before election

Julia Gillard
Labor

Resulting Prime Minister

Julia Gillard
Labor

A federal election was held on Saturday, 21 August 2010 for members of the 43rd Parliament of Australia. The incumbent centre-left Australian Labor Party led by Prime Minister Julia Gillard won a second term against the opposition centre-right Liberal/National Coalition led by Opposition Leader Tony Abbott, after Labor formed a minority government with the support of three independent MPs and one Australian Greens MP.

Labor and the Coalition each won 72 seats in the 150-seat House of Representatives,[1] four short of the requirement for majority government, resulting in the first hung parliament since the 1940 election.[2][3][4] Six crossbenchers held the balance of power.[5][6] Greens MP Adam Bandt and independent MPs Andrew Wilkie, Rob Oakeshott and Tony Windsor declared their support for Labor on confidence and supply.[7][8] Independent MP Bob Katter and National Party of Western Australia MP Tony Crook declared their support for the Coalition on confidence and supply.[9][10] The resulting 76–74 margin entitled Labor to form a minority government.[8] The Prime Minister, government ministers and parliamentary secretaries were sworn in on 14 September 2010 by the Governor-General Quentin Bryce.[11] In November 2011, Coalition MP and Deputy Speaker Peter Slipper replaced Labor MP Harry Jenkins as Speaker of the House of Representatives, increasing Labor's parliamentary majority from 75–74 to 76–73.[12][13]

In the 76-seat Senate, the Greens won one seat in each of the six states, gaining the sole balance of power with a total of nine seats, after previously holding a shared balance of power with the Family First Party and independent Nick Xenophon.[14][15] The Coalition was reduced from 37 to 34 and Labor was reduced from 32 to 31. The two remaining seats were occupied by Xenophon and Victoria's new Democratic Labor Party Senator John Madigan. Family First Party Senator Steve Fielding was defeated. These changes took effect in the Senate on 1 July 2011.[16]

More than 14 million Australians were enrolled to vote at the time of the election.[17] Australia has compulsory voting (since 1925) and uses preferential ballot (since 1919) in single-member seats for the House of Representatives and single transferable vote (since 1949) with optional group voting tickets (since 1984) in the proportionally represented Senate. The election was conducted by the Australian Electoral Commission (AEC). This was the first since the 1914 federal election that the leaders of both main parties had been born in the United Kingdom.

Results

House of Representatives

House of Representatives

Government (72)
     Labor (72)

Opposition
Coalition (72)

     Liberal (44)
     LNP (21)
     Nationals (6)
     CLP (1)

Crossbench (6)
     Independent (4)
     Greens (1)
     Nationals WA (1)
House of Representatives (IRV) — Turnout 93.21% (CV) — Informal 5.55%
Party Votes % Swing Seats Change
  Australian Labor Party 4,711,363 37.99 −5.40 72 −11
  Coalition          
  Liberal Party of Australia 3,777,383 30.46 +0.76 44 −11
  Liberal National Party (QLD) 1,130,525 9.12 +0.60 21 +21
  National Party of Australia 419,286 3.43 −0.04 6 −4
  Country Liberal Party (NT) 38,335 0.31 −0.01 1 +1
  Australian Greens 1,458,998 11.76 +3.97 1 +1
  National Party (WA)[nb 1] 43,101 0.34 +0.20 1 +1
  Independents 312,496 2.52 +0.30 4 +2
  Other 510,876 4.11 −0.38 0 0
  Total 12,402,363     150
Two-party-preferred vote
  Australian Labor Party 6,216,445 50.12 −2.58 72 −11
  Liberal/National Coalition 6,185,918 49.88 +2.58 72 +7
The disproportionality of the lower house in the 2010 election was 11.34 according to the Gallagher Index, mainly between the Labor and Green Parties.
Wikinews has related news: Australian federal election 2010: Parliament hung

*All results are final.[18][19][20][21]

Popular Vote
Labor
 
37.99%
Liberal
 
30.46%
Greens
 
11.76%
QLD LNP
 
9.12%
National
 
3.43%
National WA
 
0.34%
NT CLP
 
0.31%
Independents
 
2.52%
Other
 
4.11%
Two Party Preferred Vote
Labor
 
50.12%
Coalition
 
49.88%
Parliament Seats
Labor
 
48.89%
Coalition
 
48.89%
Greens
 
0.67%
National WA
 
0.67%
Independents
 
2.67%

Labor and the Coalition each won 72 seats in the 150-seat House of Representatives, a loss of eleven and a gain of seven respectively. Labor retained a majority of seats in a majority of states against the Coalition − New South Wales (26 to 20), Victoria (22 to 14), South Australia (6 to 5), and Tasmania (4 to 0), but fell sharply in Queensland (8 to 21) with a pre-existing minority in Western Australia (3 to 11). Labor won their largest two-party preferred vote in Victoria and Tasmania since official two-party records began in 1949, and in South Australia, their fourth-largest.[22]

On the crossbench, one member of the Australian Greens, one member of the National Party of Western Australia and four independent members held the balance of power. After gaining the support of four crossbenchers Labor was able to form a minority government.[23]

On the crossbenches:

A year after the election, The Age summarised the collective positions of the crossbenchers as one of "no regrets".[42][43] On 24 November 2011, the Coalition's Peter Slipper replaced Labor's Harry Jenkins as Speaker of the Australian House of Representatives, increasing Labor's parliamentary majority from 75–74 to 76–73. On 21 January 2012 Andrew Wilkie withdrew his support for Labor, changing the majority to 75–73.

Senate

Senate

Government (31)
     Labor (31)

Opposition
Coalition (34)

     Liberal (24)
     LNP (6)
     Nationals (3)
     CLP (1)

Crossbench (11)
     Greens (9)
     DLP (1)
     Independent (1)
Senate (STV GV) — Turnout 93.82% (CV) — Informal 3.75%
Party Votes % Swing Seats won Continuing senators Total seats Change
  Liberal/National Coalition 4,871,871 38.30 –1.47 18 16 34 –3
  Australian Labor Party 4,469,734 35.13 –5.17 15 16 31 –1
  Australian Greens 1,667,315 13.11 +4.07 6 3 9 +4
  Family First Party 267,493 2.10 +0.48 0 - 0 –1
  Democratic Labor Party 134,987 1.06 +0.14 1 - 1 +1
  Independents 55,786 0.44 –0.94 0 1 1 0
  Other 1,255,047 9.86 +2.89 0 - 0 0
  Total 12,722,233     40 36 76

*All results are final.[16][20][21][44]

The Senate has 76 seats. Forty seats were up for election; six in each of the six states and two in each of the two territories. The terms of the four senators from the territories commenced on election day, all other terms took effect from 1 July 2011.[45][46] The Coalition holds 34 seats and Labor holds 31 seats, with the balance of power shifting solely to the Australian Greens with nine seats, after previously holding a shared balance of power with the Family First Party and independent Nick Xenophon. The Labor government requires the support of at least eight non-Labor Senators to pass legislation.

Labor and the Coalition incurred swings against them in votes and seats. The Greens received a four percent swing and won a seat in each of the six states at the election, a first for an Australian minor party. John Madigan (Victoria) of the Democratic Labor Party won a seat, while Steve Fielding (Victoria) of the Family First Party lost his seat. Xenophon was not required to stand at this election but will be up for re-election at the next. Minor parties not winning a seat but receiving a notable swing include the Australian Sex Party (+2.0), the Liberal Democratic Party (+1.7) and the Shooters and Fishers Party (+1.4).[16][44]

Divisions changing hands

Members in italics did not re-contest their House of Representatives seats at this election. Six notional boundary redistributed seats were contested at this election. Based on booths contested at the previous election, the seats redistributed by the AEC from being marginal Coalition seats to marginal Labor seats – Dickson, Gilmore, Herbert, Macarthur and Swan – were all retained by the Coalition. Greenway was redistributed to become a marginal to fairly safe Labor seat, and was retained by Labor.

Seat Pre-2010 Swing Post-2010
Party Member Margin Margin Member Party
Bennelong, NSW   Labor Maxine McKew 1.40 4.52 3.12 John Alexander Liberal  
Bonner, Qld   Labor Kerry Rea 5.47 7.35 2.82 Ross Vasta Liberal National  
Brisbane, Qld   Labor Arch Bevis 4.60 5.73 1.13 Teresa Gambaro Liberal National  
Dawson, Qld   Labor James Bidgood 2.59 5.02 2.43 George Christensen Liberal National  
Denison, Tas   Labor Duncan Kerr 15.29 N/A 1.21 Andrew Wilkie Independent  
Flynn, Qld   Labor Chris Trevor 2.24 5.82 3.58 Ken O'Dowd Liberal National  
Forde, Qld   Labor Brett Raguse 3.36 4.99 1.63 Bert van Manen Liberal National  
Hasluck, WA   Labor Sharryn Jackson 0.85 1.42 0.57 Ken Wyatt Liberal  
La Trobe, Vic   Liberal Jason Wood 0.51 1.42 0.91 Laura Smyth Labor  
Leichhardt, Qld   Labor Jim Turnour 4.06 8.61 4.55 Warren Entsch Liberal National  
Longman, Qld   Labor Jon Sullivan 1.87 3.79 1.92 Wyatt Roy Liberal National  
Macquarie, NSW   Labor Bob Debus 0.28 1.49 1.21 Louise Markus Liberal  
Melbourne, Vic   Labor Lindsay Tanner 4.71 10.75 6.04 Adam Bandt Greens  
McEwen, Vic   Liberal Fran Bailey 0.02 5.34 5.32 Rob Mitchell Labor  
O'Connor, WA   Liberal Wilson Tuckey 12.76 N/A 3.56 Tony Crook Nationals WA  
Solomon, NT   Labor Damian Hale 0.19 1.94 1.75 Natasha Griggs Country Liberal  

Background

Key dates

House of Representatives

The Labor Party, led by Julia Gillard, and the Liberal Party, led by Tony Abbott, were the predominant parties to contest the election. The smaller National Party led by Warren Truss is in a coalition with the Liberal Party. Following the 2007 federal election, the 150-member Australian House of Representatives consisted of 83 Labor-held seats, 65 Coalition seats (55 Liberal and 10 National), and two seats held by independents. The Australian Greens won 8 per cent of the 2007 vote, and the Family First Party won 2 per cent, but neither party won any seats in the lower house.

The coalition total was reduced to 64 seats when Rob Oakeshott, former state Nationals turned independent MP, won the seat of Lyne at the September 2008 Lyne by-election, resulting from the resignation of former Howard minister and Nationals leader Mark Vaile. The April 2008 Gippsland by-election, resulting from the resignation of the former Howard minister and Nationals MP Peter McGauran, saw the Nationals' Darren Chester retain the seat, receiving a swing of 6%.[50] The Liberals suffered a swing in the September 2008 Mayo by-election resulting from the resignation of former Howard minister and Liberal leader Alexander Downer, and came close to losing the seat to the Greens candidate. The Liberals retained seats at the Bradfield and Higgins by-elections in December 2009. The member for Ryan, Michael Johnson, was expelled from the Liberal National Party on 20 May 2010, reducing the Coalition to 63 seats.[51]

Redistributions

Since the previous national election in 2007 there were a number of redistributions. These realignments of electorate boundaries are regularly undertaken by the Australian Electoral Commission and they maintain similar voter numbers in each electorate. They saw Labor's notional number of seats increase to 88 with the coalition's notional number decreased to 59, with independents in three. The swing required by the opposition to win majority government had decreased by approximately 0.1 percent.[52]

The redistribution of electoral divisions for Western Australia made the Liberal held Swan notionally Labor, and vastly changed Kalgoorlie and O'Connor, with the former being safer for the Liberals, and the latter becoming more marginal. Kalgoorlie was also renamed Durack. The redistribution also damaged the WA Nationals' chances of a House of Representatives seat.[53][54][55] Tasmania was also redistributed but, while there were some changes to boundaries, little changed in terms of seat margins.[56][57]

New South Wales lost a seat to Queensland due to population changes for the second election in a row. The Labor Party suggested the abolition of the marginal Liberal seat of Macarthur, while the Liberal Party suggested that Liberal-held Hume and National-held Riverina be merged to create a new seat called "Bradman" in honour of Sir Donald Bradman. The National Party suggested the abolition of the Labor-held city seat of Banks.[58] The draft New South Wales redistribution, published in August 2009, proposed that Reid be abolished and that Lowe be renamed "McMahon" in honour of former Prime Minister Sir William McMahon. In response to widespread criticism of the abolition of the name "Reid", the finalised redistribution, published in October 2009, instead had Lowe renamed "Reid" and Prospect replaced with McMahon. Boundary changes also resulted in the Liberal seats of Macarthur, Greenway and Gilmore becoming notionally Labor-held, with major changes to other seats, including Calare, Parkes and Macquarie.[59]

In Queensland, the seat of Wright was created as a Liberal-held seat based on the Gold Coast hinterland. The redistribution saw the status of Blair change from marginal Labor to a safe Labor seat. The status of marginal Liberal seats Dickson and Herbert also changed to marginal Labor seats.[60]

A redistribution for Victoria commenced in 2010, but was not finalised before the election was called.[61]

Senate

In the 76-member Australian Senate, from July 2008 to June 2011, the Labor and Liberal parties hold 32 seats each, and the Liberals' coalition partner, the National Party (including one CLP), five seats. The balance of power rests with the crossbench, consisting of:

For a majority, the government requires an additional seven votes from non-Labor senators. If the Liberal Party chooses to vote with the Labor Party, support from the crossbench is not required.

Senate terms expiring

Forty seats in the Senate were up for election:

The party composition of these 40 senators whose terms will expire is:

These seats are listed in order of election for the six states and two territories:[62]

NSW Vic Qld WA SA Tas ACT NT
Bill Heffernan (Lib)
Steve Hutchins (ALP)
Concetta F.-Wells (Lib)
John Faulkner (ALP)
Fiona Nash (Nat)
Michael Forshaw (ALP)
Michael Ronaldson (Lib)
Kim Carr (ALP)
Julian McGauran (Lib)
Stephen Conroy (ALP)
Judith Troeth (Lib)
Steve Fielding (FFP)
Brett Mason (Lib)
Jan McLucas (ALP)
George Brandis (Lib)
Joe Ludwig (ALP)
Barnaby Joyce (Nat)
Russell Trood (Lib)
Chris Back (Lib)
Chris Evans (ALP)
Mathias Cormann (Lib)
Glenn Sterle (ALP)
Judith Adams (Lib)
Rachel Siewert (Grn)
Nick Minchin (Lib)
Anne McEwen (ALP)
Mary Jo Fisher (Lib)
Annette Hurley (ALP)
Alan Ferguson (Lib)
Dana Wortley (ALP)
Eric Abetz (Lib)
Kerry O'Brien (ALP)
Guy Barnett (Lib)
Helen Polley (ALP)
Stephen Parry (Lib)
Christine Milne (Grn)
Kate Lundy (ALP)
Gary Humphries (Lib)
Trish Crossin (ALP)
Nigel Scullion (CLP)

House of Representatives opinion polling

Post-election Newspoll

A Newspoll taken 27–29 August 2010 of 1134 voters revealed 47 percent wanted a Gillard Labor government, to 39 percent for an Abbott Coalition government, while 14 percent were uncommitted. There was no difference between male and female voters. Ages 18–34 and 34–49 were even stronger for Labor, while those above 50 bucked the trend preferring the Coalition 45 percent to 40 percent.[63]

Poll of 28,000

A JWS Research "mega-poll" was conducted by robocall late in the campaign and published by Fairfax. It polled an Australian record of 22,000 voters in 54 marginal seats and a further 6,000 in safe seats. It revealed a national two-party-preferred vote for Labor of 51.6 percent. Losses in Queensland and New South Wales were offset by the gains of Dunkley, McEwen (both 57 percent for Labor), and Cowper and Boothby (both 54 percent for Labor), finishing with a total of 79 Labor, 68 coalition, 3 independent.[64][65][66]

Two-party-preferred vote

The graph shows a timeline of the estimates by three main polling companies – Roy Morgan (green), Nielsen (blue), and Newspoll (red) – of the two-party-preferred vote for Labor from January 2008 to 20 July 2010. The pink dot on the left side represents the actual 2PP vote for Labor in the November 2007 election.

Primary vote

The graph shows a timeline of Newspoll's estimates of the primary vote for Labor (red), the Coalition (blue), the Greens (green), and other parties or independent candidates (magenta) from 2007 to 2010. The four dots on the left side represent the actual vote for each party in the November 2007 election.

Newspoll leader ratings

Better Prime Minister^
Date Labor
Gillard
Liberal
Abbott
17–19 Aug 2010 50% 37%
13–15 Aug 2010 50% 35%
6–8 Aug 2010 49% 34%
30 Jul – 1 Aug 2010 50% 35%
23–25 Jul 2010 50% 34%
16–18 Jul 2010 57% 27%
25–27 Jun 2010 53% 29%
Rudd Abbott
18–20 Jun 2010 46% 37%
28–30 May 2010 49% 33%
14–16 May 2010 49% 33%
30 Apr – 2 May 2010 50% 32%
16–18 Apr 2010 56% 29%
26–28 Mar 2010 59% 27%
12–14 Mar 2010 55% 30%
26–28 Feb 2010 55% 30%
12–14 Feb 2010 55% 27%
29–31 Jan 2010 58% 26%
15–17 Jan 2010 57% 25%
4–6 Dec 2009 60% 23%
Rudd Turnbull
27–29 Nov 2009 65% 14%
13–15 Nov 2009 63% 22%
30 Oct – 1 Nov 2009 63% 19%
16–18 Oct 2009 65% 19%
28 Sep – 1 Oct 2009 67% 18%
Polling conducted by Newspoll and published in The Australian.
^Remainder were "uncommitted".
Satisfaction^
Date Satisfied Dissatisfied Satisfied Dissatisfied
Gillard Abbott
17–19 Aug 2010 44% 43% 42% 50%
13–15 Aug 2010 44% 38% 43% 46%
6–8 Aug 2010 43% 41% 41% 49%
30 Jul – 1 Aug 2010 42% 40% 44% 46%
23–25 Jul 2010 41% 37% 40% 46%
16–18 Jul 2010 48% 29% 36% 51%
25–27 Jun 2010 N/A (new) N/A (new) 42% 41%
Rudd Abbott
18–20 Jun 2010 36% 55% 38% 49%
28–30 May 2010 36% 54% 37% 49%
14–16 May 2010 39% 51% 42% 45%
30 Apr – 2 May 2010 39% 50% 45% 43%
16–18 Apr 2010 50% 41% 46% 40%
26–28 Mar 2010 51% 39% 44% 43%
12–14 Mar 2010 48% 41% 47% 38%
26–28 Feb 2010 51% 40% 48% 38%
12–14 Feb 2010 50% 40% 44% 37%
29–31 Jan 2010 50% 38% 41% 39%
15–17 Jan 2010 52% 34% 40% 35%
4–6 Dec 2009 58% 32% N/A (new) N/A (new)
Rudd Turnbull
27–29 Nov 2009 56% 34% 36% 50%
13–15 Nov 2009 56% 34% 34% 50%
30 Oct – 1 Nov 2009 59% 32% 32% 51%
16–18 Oct 2009 63% 28% 32% 54%
28 Sep – 1 Oct 2009 67% 21% 33% 48%
Polling conducted by Newspoll and published in The Australian.
^Remainder were "uncommitted".

Newspaper endorsements

Dailies   Sundays
Newspaper Endorsement Newspaper Endorsement
The Advertiser Labor[67]
The Age Labor[68] The Sunday Age Labor[69]
The Australian Liberal[70] The Weekend Australian Liberal
The Australian Financial Review Liberal
The Canberra Times Labor[67]
The Courier-Mail Liberal National[67] The Sunday Mail Liberal National[67]
The Daily Telegraph Liberal[67] The Sunday Telegraph Labor[71]
The Herald Sun Liberal[72] Sunday Herald Sun Labor[73]
The Mercury Labor
Northern Territory News Labor[74]
The Sydney Morning Herald Labor[75]
The West Australian Liberal[76]

Candidates and seats

See also

Notes

  1. The National Party of Western Australia prior to and subsequent to the election are in no federal Coalition agreement, Nationals WA MP Tony Crook has stated that he is a crossbencher, and has said: "In every news report and press report we see, my number is being allocated in with the Coalition and it shouldn't be". Thus, the party has been counted separately from the Coalition totals.
  2. 1 2 On 6 August 2010, the High Court of Australia ruled in the case Rowe v Electoral Commissioner that certain provisions of the Commonwealth Electoral Act 1918 were invalid, specifically those introduced in the Electoral and Referendum Amendment (Electoral Integrity and Other Measures) Act 2006, which closed the electoral roll on the day the writ for a federal election is issued. An estimated 100,000 enrolments were reconsidered by the Australian Electoral Commission, which contacted applicants to inform them they would be eligible to vote in this election.

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