Huon: Dean Harriss leads Clare Glade-Wright narrowly on primaries but Glade-Wright appears strongly placed on preferences
Rosevears: Jo Palmer (Lib) has very large primary vote lead and expected to win (Liberals have claimed victory)
ELECTORAL, POLLING AND POLITICAL ANALYSIS, COMMENT AND NEWS FROM THE PEOPLE'S REPUBLIC OF CLARK. LET 2026 BE THE YEAR VICTORIA IS FINALLY FREED OF THE CURSE OF GROUP TICKET VOTING. IF USING THIS SITE ON MOBILE YOU CAN SCROLL DOWN AND CLICK "VIEW WEB VERSION" TO SEE THE SIDEBAR FULL OF GOODIES.
Huon: Dean Harriss leads Clare Glade-Wright narrowly on primaries but Glade-Wright appears strongly placed on preferences
Rosevears: Jo Palmer (Lib) has very large primary vote lead and expected to win (Liberals have claimed victory)
The 2026 South Australian lower house was remarkable in so many ways. It makes Queensland 1998 seem almost boring by comparison, except that Queensland 1998 was there first. Maybe all elections are going to be like this now and this soon will not seem so unusual but if that's so my colleagues and I are going to have a very busy time in the future!
All manner of curious things happened here. Finally, someone (Lou Nicholson in Finniss) won a state or federal seat from fourth on primaries; hooray we have lived to see it. Both majors missed the 2CP in Stuart and Mount Gambier in the first such cases since Nicklin 2001. The Liberal Opposition missed more 2CPs (29) than they made (18) and were outpolled by One Nation (unprecedented) but are still the Opposition. Worse than that they missed nine 3CPs as well and even managed to finish fifth in Port Adelaide and Black - Black being a seat they won at the previous election! And so on. It was obvious this was going to be a very messy election - a little while out I thought how on earth will we ever make a pendulum from THIS - but aspects of it were even more unique than I saw coming.
What this election was not about
This election was not about preferences. It takes its place alongside Victoria 2022 as an election where there has been a high volume of blaming preferential voting for a disproportionate result but preferences had virtually nothing to do with it! The primary vote leader won in 45 of the 47 electorates. Each major party had one seat where they led on primaries (Finniss for the Liberals and Kavel for Labor) but were beaten by an independent. With such low primary vote shares that is bound to happen somewhere.
Much of the nonsense about the impact of preferences came from the One Nation corner, and to be fair in the early stages of the postcount this was exacerbated by confusing wording (or lack thereof) around counting realignments on the ECSA website and by the ABC not quickly calling One Nation's wins. (And with good reason as Narungga which ended up extremely close was called by some sources on the night.)
But ultimately the reason why One Nation won 4/47 seats off their 22.9% is simply that they were only ahead on primaries in that many. They were almost run down by an incredible preference flow to the Liberals in Narungga but survived by 58 votes. Cory Bernardi, showing he is just as good at spreading nonsense about elections as he was at spreading it about human beings getting married, has claimed One Nation should be the opposition because "preferences got some of the uniparty people over the line". In fact only two of the five Liberal wins even had a Labor exclusion and in both of those the Liberal candidate was well ahead of One Nation at the time. This cannot be said for One Nation themselves in Hammond where they fell behind during the distribution and would in fact have lost had the Liberals followed the "uniparty" plot and recommended preferences to Labor. Indeed it's another shameless (or brainless) display by Bernardi to be pushing this "uniparty" nonsense when the fact is that the Liberals tried to help One Nation beat Labor via their how to vote cards and One Nation didn't return the favour.
Estimating 2PPs - is this even worth it?
This section has been rated Wonk Factor 5/5. Beware!
The ECSA is not going to put out an official 2PP and it looks like what we will get instead is a Labor vs Non-Labor figure estimated by Antony Green (who has done a tremendous amount of analysis very quickly here) at 55.7 to Labor. I decided I would have a go at estimating a 2PP and a Labor vs One Nation equivalent for this election anyway, partly because I wanted to have a look at Liberal vs One Nation competitiveness against Labor in certain seats and partly because, well, it was there and somebody has to climb the north face.
The method I used is the same method (which I call the "actual distribution method") that I used for Queensland 2017 among other cases:
- where one of the 2PP sides is excluded prior to the 2CP, follow the exclusion to that point and credit all votes received by each side to that point to their 2PP.
- for votes with other candidates at this point (One Nation for the classic 2PP and Liberals for the alternate, Greens and Independents in both cases) assign those votes on 2PP based on the total of all preferences that flowed from that source in other seats to each of the 2PP sides.
This means that I use partial preference distributions and not just the cases where a party is excluded at the final stage; this partly helps cancel out the tendency of 3CP preference flows to be weaker than the flow from an excluded party's actual voters because of votes coming in from other sources. Sometimes this can produce exaggerated flows in some seats - for instance if Greens preferences split 80-10-10 between Labor, Liberal and One Nation in a seat I will credit this as 88.9% for Labor vs each party, but a voter voting Greens-One Nation isn't that likely to go to Labor next. (A voter voting Greens-Liberal, incidentally, generally will go to Labor over One Nation).
As a sanity check I also considered the following: as we have seen with Hunter, parties do better on preferences from a given source in seats where they perform better, so it could be that One Nation and the Liberals would each do worse on each others' preferences in the seats where they don't receive them than the seats where they do. Therefore, for instance for the classic 2PP, I graphed the ratio (Labor/(Labor+Liberal) at the point where one major was excluded) vs Labor's share of One Nation preferences, and then modelled what that should look like across every seat. In both cases the modelled flow from one conservative party to the other came out between 1 and 2 points weaker than the flow I had already obtained, which is not significant and is about what I would expect based on batched preference flows being weaker than the flows of voters who voted 1 for a party.
Where I have the most reservation about my numbers is that there was a curiously weak flow from excluded independents to Labor vs Liberal. This is partly driven by the exclusion of ex-Liberal Nick McBride whose preferences flowed strongly to the Liberals. But two of the eight independents for whom there are no 2PP preference flows were also ex-Liberals, and the weak pattern extends further than just McBride. I'll adjust my numbers if any more light is shed on these; for instance in Flinders there should eventually be a classic 2PP.
Overall my model has the following preference flows (note that these are not necessarily primary votes for the preference sources, they may be, eg, someone who votes 1 for an obscure party, 2 Greens etc).
* To Labor vs Liberal: One Nation 27.2%, Greens 85.9%, IND 50.8%
* To Labor vs One Nation: Liberal 33.9%, Greens 84.8%, IND 55.9%
The estimate I've obtained to date is that despite the slightly lower primary vote, the Liberals lose the 2PP vs Labor very slightly less heavily than One Nation loses the equivalent figure: I get Labor at 57.89 vs the Liberals, and 58.19 vs One Nation.
I also did (extremely rubbery) 2PP and shadow 2PP estimates for every seat using the above flows for candidates who outlasted the relevant exclusion points. On these estimates, the win/loss outcome for Labor vs the Liberals is the same in every seat except for Heysen (49.3 vs Liberal, 56.6 vs One Nation) and Bragg (41.5 vs 56.6). One Nation outperforms the Liberals in 24 seats but nearly all of them are either safe for Labor in either case or seats Labor lost to both parties. Four Labor seats that are not marginal vs the Liberals are marginal vs One Nation: the northern Adelaide set of Elizabeth, King, Light and Taylor. If One Nation sticks around Labor may be vulnerable in these seats next time around, but Elizabeth and Light were vacant so new Labor MPs should pick up personal votes.
The flows observed, by the way, suggest there is nothing wrong with continuing to use last election modelled flows for 2PPs and ALP vs ON shadow-2PPs. The Liberal to One Nation flow at 66% is somewhat lower than the 71% that I model for the 2025 election nationwide, but that will be largely because there was no Nationals component. The One Nation to Liberal flow is only slightly weaker than the federal election and that is with an uncompetitive Liberal Party. The Greens to Labor flows seem slightly weaker but that is normal for state elections.
Two-party swing strikes again
People are always complaining about two-party-preferred being useless and surely this election would be a standard for that measure if ever there was one, but not quite so fast. Again, the two-party swing (which I've modelled as 3.3%) told much of the story of this election. It would have been expected from this swing that Labor would have gained about four seats from the Liberals; they in fact gained five. Below that swing level Labor won Morialta and Unley but Josh Teague somehow retained Heysen, and Ngadjuri was a dud for Labor but fell to One Nation anyway. Slightly above the swing level, Labor won Hartley, Morphett and Colton. So they outperformed the pendulum, but not by much, especially as three of the five seats they won became vacant. On my estimates they may have also won the 2PP in Kavel (or not, see Addendum below), but that was in effect a retain for independents.
For all that there was a striking pattern that Antony has also observed regarding Labor getting great swings in marginals and having swings against it in its own safe seats. Antony has graphed it in terms of pseudoswings (eg ALP/Lib to ALP/ON) but in terms of estimated 2PP swings the pattern (coloured by seat winner) is just as stark:
I've decided not to do a mixed post-election pendulum; Ben Raue has one here and I will decide what SA pendulums come to my site and the circumstances in which they come much closer to the next election. What is worth noting is that there are hardly any classic two-way marginals left because of the smashing inflicted on the Liberals in most of their marginals - only Heysen (Lib 0.6%), Morphett (ALP 0.7%) and Hartley (ALP 4.7%) - all the others that I model as 2PP marginals are occupied by someone else. On the other scale Labor vs One Nation marginals are Hammond (ON 4.9%), Light (ALP 1.6%), Taylor (ALP 4.2%), Elizabeth (ALP 4.5%), King (ALP 5.2%). Four years is an eternity in the history of One Nation being competitive or not so we will see in 2030 whether any of this matters. Ben also has lots of excellent detail about 3CP marginality of which there is plenty (most notably Heysen, the latest in a national string of very close Liberal/ALP/Green postcounts). Also see Ben Messenger's Blusky thread with diagrams.
The biggest victory ever?
Labor shouldn't let this one go to their heads as there are warning signs in these results, well if you stare at them for long enough there might be. But one theme I go on about a lot on here is federal drag, the theory and fact that when a state government is of the same party as the federal government, it tends to go backwards (and the older it is the more it does so). Yet here a federally dragged government that had been in office throughout the previous term has beaten its previous election result by 7/47 seats (14.9%). And this has never happened, in any state, ever. It's not quite the seat share record for an at-election change (because the 7 seats includes the two the government, also remarkably, picked up in by-elections during the term, so if ignoring those it's beaten by the Playford government's 5/39 coming off an indie rebellion in SA 1941) but something has gone very right for SA Labor and very wrong for its main opponent here.
Despite this, it could have been worse for the conservative forces, with widespread predictions that either the Liberals or One Nation might actually get zero or one seats. (I saw at least half a dozen forecasts of a One Nation seat zero by people who were pretty well informed about elections but may in some cases have let their dislike of the party lead them astray). With nine seats between them, the two parties did even do slightly better than my read of the polls as pointing to a few seats each if correct, but that was partly because the election was actually just a little bit closer than the polls suggested. The major party gap was slightly lower, and so was the Greens primary, and the preference flow from independents may have been weaker - all pointing to a lower 2PP swing than expected. It was also because independents on the whole did not have such a great election. Fraser Ellis finally lost (perhaps because voters realised a vote for him could be a vote for having to vote again) and Lou Nicholson was the only gain in a seat that didn't have an outgoing independent. Other touted indies flopped even if they had done well in 2022. Credit by the way to Australian Election Forecasts for a remarkably close to exact seat tally forecast.
And finally ... the polls!
This was an excellent election for Australian polling under unusual and difficult circumstances. Four pollsters using online panel polling polled at least twice each (Newspoll, YouGov, DemosAU and Fox&Hedgehog) and these collectively did very well on the overall shape of the result. Non-online offerings such as an SMS poll by Roy Morgan and an experimental AI voice automated poll by Resolve were a bit more excitable on the size of the One Nation vote, whether because of the method differences or otherwise.
Three of the six pollsters decided not to release two-party figures (the three who did were YouGov, Fox&Hedgehog and Roy Morgan; these also all issued ALP vs One Nation figures). I've decided it is not appropriate to formally measure 2PP accuracy for an election where the utility of 2PP is so heavily debated by analysts with many not even estimating it, and where there is no single method of estimating it, so for this election I am only using primary votes. Here is my usual table minus the 2PPs (note: I am using the ABC's figures as there is an issue with the ECSA total numbers):
Addendum April 11: Antony Green has estimated 2PPs for eight seats that are missing them; these figures for Labor with my method's estimates are shown below (Green/Bonham):
Chaffey 31.4/31.4
Finniss 42.9/41.1
Flinders 25.9/30.9
Kavel 49.2/52.4
Mackillop 32.5/34.1
Mount Gambier 44.4/46.4
Narungga 35.4/38.4
Stuart 39.4/40.3
These may be based off pulled 2CP counts and if so will be more accurate than my estimates. There is however a large discrepancy in the 2PP vote totals for Stuart and a smaller one for Mackillop. If I include these numbers as is my 2PP estimate for Labor reduces to 57.72 (perhaps slightly further accounting for the Stuart undercount). However as this is a skewed sample of the seats that do not have exact 2PPs (skewed towards seats where Labor polled poorly and was eliminated) it is better not to do this so 57.89 remains my overall estimate for now. Antony has also provided an ALP/ON estimate for Croydon of 79.7 vs my 78.8; if this is included then ALP vs ON changes to 58.21; again, it's better not to do this.
ROSEVEARS (2020 margin Lib vs IND 0.57%)
This is my second guide to the Legislative Council this year. My guide for Huon is here and my latest guide to voting patterns in the upper house is up.
I expect to be doing live coverage of the Legislative Council elections on this site on election night, scheduled for Saturday May 2. However, updates to this page in the lead-up will probably be less frequent than normal.
The current numbers in the Council are three Liberal, three Labor, one Green and eight independents, with the independents ranging fairly evenly across the Green to Liberal spectrum. Labor gives up one vote on the floor and in the committee stages because it holds the Presidency. As the major parties frequently vote together, the Government has not had an especially difficult time of it in the upper chamber lately, most notably getting the hugely controversial Macquarie Point stadium through 9 votes to 5. But that is not to say the Liberals get everything their own way, for instance having their legislation to wind up greyhound racing referred to an inquiry.
This year sees just two Legislative Council contests, being the first defence for independent Dean Harriss in Huon and likewise for Liberal Jo Palmer in Rosevears.
Yesterday the AEC released public feedback on the proposed radical redistribution as previously covered here (Draft Scraps The Franklin Divide). Frankly I thought there might be more complaints than there were, but some of those that there are are pretty punchy. Of the 90 distinct submissions received, exactly half by my count discussed the proposed boundaries at all, and of these I counted 14 as purely supporting the proposal (one or two noting some initial reluctance in doing so) and 31 objecting, nearly all of these proposing something substantially different if they proposed anything at all.
Predictably the most common objections concerned the condition of Lyons and especially the placement of Glenorchy in it. Objectors raised Glenorchy's disconnection from the bulk of Lyons through the inclusion of Brighton in Franklin, argued that neo-Lyons was thematically incoherent, complained about the severing of Glenorchy from Greater Hobart and also objected to rural Tasmania being fragmented into majority urban seats. Submission 34 by Mark James is a good representative of the objections:
"Under the proposed model, rural/regional voters will be outnumbered by city voters in all five electorates. There is no community of interest at all between Glenorchy, Sheffield, and St. Helens. - For a state with a famously decentralised population, in which the majority of the population live outside the capital city, voters in the capital city will form the bulk of three out of five electorates."
Similarly, some submissions objected to the placement of Brighton or at least the whole thereof in Franklin on the grounds of it having stronger links to the southern midlands (in my view this is true of the Brighton part but not so much of the Bridgewater/Gagebrook part).
A different objection in a small number of submissions was the position of Break O'Day in neo-Lyons as the only east coast touching council. Some submissions preferred Break O'Day to go into Bass with the whole of Meander Valley LGA including Prospect Vale and Blackstone Heights remaining in Lyons. This new Lyons would be virtually landlocked, touching the Derwent foreshore in Glenorchy but not reaching the actual sea as such anywhere. I certainly wouldn't be going there for any seashell collecting trips.
Submission 83 by Aussies Elect raises a point also raised here in comments - some issues are caused by the weird boundaries of Southern Midlands if that council becomes the Lyons boundary. In the area of Runnymede, Southern Midlands crosses the Tasman Highway, meaning that as one goes from Orford to Sorell and vice versa, the highway will briefly pass from Franklin to Lyons and then back to Franklin again. Furthermore, the Southern Midlands boundary cuts Richmond (currently in Lyons) off Colebrook and Campania in the Coal River Valley. If one is willing to break up LGAs then there's an opportunity here to expand the new Franklin in this area and in the process keep the northern part of Glamorgan-Spring Bay in Lyons.
Local government areas often don't like being split between electorates and this redistribution process has made me wonder about the extent to which the tail wags the dog. Why are Tasmania's local government boundaries like they are (in some cases I suspect the answer is about rates bases) and should LGA boundaries be adaptive to the needs of the federal boundary process rather than the other way around? Anyway the Redistribution Committee can only work with what there is.
A minority supported putting Derwent Valley into Clark (see my comments on this in the "Clark extends up the river" section of my first article), which provides scope for maintaining more of Kingborough in the current Franklin. I detected basically no support for the minimal change option of moving Clark further south into Kingborough, suggesting that most objectors realise this is a problem but prefer a different solution to the one found.
There were a number of eccentric proposals. I'm not going to go through those in detail for cases where the submission doesn't realise this is a federal redistribution, hasn't noticed the number of seats is fixed at five, or is barely comprehensible. (In at least one case the AEC seemed confused whether the submission actually referred to the boundaries or just the seat names). However it was disappointing to see some people supporting putting Huon Valley and in cases parts of Kingborough into Lyons without noticing that these areas are essentially disconnected from the rest of Lyons with the connecting bushland having only one significant unsealed link road through it.
The Glenorchy submission (72) caused serious threats to my Panadol supply and includes a bizarre example "contiguous Franklin" alternative in which in order to keep Glenorchy in the same seat as most of Hobart City and move Kingborough into Clark, a substantial chunk of inner Hobart political greenery is donated to Lyons, becoming an urban exclave and also meaning that to remain in Clark while commuting from Glenorchy to the remaining Hobart City part of it you would have to undertake a 13.5 km bushwalk from Tolosa St to Old Farm Road peaking at around 1120 m near Big Bend. (Looks like a rather good walk actually). If this submission was actually entirely written by humans then they've passed a reverse Turing test with flying colours (sorry this is not a compliment; hat tip to a colleague who suggested that it looked partially AI written.)
In terms of the draft redistribution proposal (as distinct from the daft redistribution proposals in some of the submissions) the Greens and Labor have supported it. The Liberals have opposed it without making further comment on any particular alternative. Sorell Council has supported the proposal while Glenorchy, Break O'Day, Southern Midlands, Brighton and Central Highlands are objecting. I am surprised more councils did not make submissions.Meanwhile, readers of this site continue to have a positive view of the draft proposal.
What next?
There is now a phase in which people can reply to the submissions. Following that the Augmented Electoral Commission (which adds the Chair and the non-judicial member of the AEC to the existing Redistribution Committee of two AEC and two non-AEC staff) can make a decision, and can hold public hearings prior to doing so if it wishes. In the event that it now wished to switch from the initial proposal to one that was substantially different (such as Glenorchy into Franklin instead of the east coast) then there would be likely to be another round of ideas submission on the current proposal.
In the leadup to the 2026 Legislative Council elections for Huon and Rosevears (link TBA when I've written it) this article is my annual review of voting patterns on divisions in the upper house in the previous four years. But before I get into it, I need to deal with some methods nerdery at the start.
Shy Division Losing
Some Labor MLCs aren't particularly fond of my findings, and they were especially defensive about a stat that in the small sample added to the mix last year Labor had voted with the Liberal Government 90% of the time. (Fear not, in this year's sample it is 86%). This even led to an attempt on election night live TV to shoot down (but not shag or marry) my methods in which it was falsely claimed that if there were thirty divisions on a single Bill I would include them all in my assessment. Fortunately the incorrect claim has since been retracted.
What in particular the Labor MLCs do not like goes to an unfortunate quirk of the LegCo's standing orders. When votes are called for on a motion they are initially taken on the voices. The President or whoever is in the chair at the time declares a provisional result, eg "I think the ayes have it". At this point someone can call for a division - but only if they are voting on the side that lost the call on the voices.
In a case where the Government has no friends on a vote they might vote one way on the voices, but then not bother having that vote recorded to avoid embarrassment. And in this case, while Labor voted the other way, there is nothing Labor can do here to cause a division such that them voting on the other side shows up in my figures. This does sometimes happen, though no evidence that it happens often has been presented. (I had thought this was in contrast to federal parliament because of something that happened in the same-sex marriage vote, but was mistaken - see comments.)
FINNISS (Lib vs ALP 6.7%, Lib vs IND 0.7%)
David Basham (Lib) vs Lou Nicholson (IND)
Nicholson wins from fourth position on primaries. Unprecedented in state and federal elections
The Victor Harbour/Goolwa seat of Finniss sees a similarly messy count to Kavel with four candidates with currently very similar primary votes, as I start this thread with the prepoll not yet in and sadly only 33.1% of enrolment counted. It may be very different after prepoll and it was very different in 2022. On the night Lou Nicholson was on 54.7% 2CP vs Basham and the doubt seemed to be would she make the final two or not. She ended up making the final two but very poor numbers on prepolls and absents resulted in Basham winning (just) 50.7-49.3. Now, the rematch ...
As with Kavel this is another seat where nobody has a quarter of the primary vote. Currently One Nation's Greg Powell (23.6%) leads Basham by six votes, with Nicholson on 20.5% and Phoebe Redington (ALP) on 17.6%. The Greens have 7.2% and the top of the ballot paper, and have recommended preferences to Nicholson. The others are Bron Lewis (a tealish sounding independent on 4.3%), Animal Justice 1.6%, Aus Family 1.2% Fair Go 0.4%.
The rural lower Murray seat of Hammond was one of those that stood out in pre-election modelling as being a seat on a relatively low Liberal vs ALP margin but nonetheless being apparently fertile ground for One Nation. And this looks like this is how things have panned out. As I start this article Simone Bailey (Labor) holds a thin lead with 27.5% over Robert Roylance (One Nation) on 27.0% with incumbent Adrian Pederick in third on 22.1%. The most significant preference source is independent Airlie Keen on 10.4%. Keen ran competitively in 2022 but there has been a large swing against her with the rise of One Nation. The rest: the Greens 4.5% Legalise Cannabis 3.3% FF 1.9% Animal Justice 1.4% Lucas Hope (IND) 1.0% Aus Family 0.5% United Voice 0.4% Fair Go 0.1%. Yes there is a candidate in this seat who actually at present has 27 votes, their presence on the ballot paper probably costing thousands of dollars in staffing costs.
KAVEL (Retiring IND vs Lib 25.4, notional Liberal vs ALP 3.5)
Matt Schultz (IND) vs David Leach (ALP) vs Bradley Orr (Lib) - Schultz expected to win
Sunday 22nd 11:50am: I really wanted to wait til the prepolls were in before unrolling postcount threads for the messy seats, because prepolls often put scenarios to bed. But as it's taking a while to get there on Sunday, I will start the Kavel thread before that point (and probably the Finniss one too) and if things do later simplify then this is at least a time capsule of how insane this seat looked.
The problem with the Mt Barker / Adelaide Hills seat is simple; nobody has any votes. The succession war for the former conservative Liberal turned indie/Speaker/Minister Dan Cregan has produced a splatter of primaries with nobody with even a quarter of the vote (I'm wondering if this is some kind of record for a mainland state seat if it persists). With just 39.5% of enrolment counted, Labor's David Leach leads on 23.9%, Cregan's nominal successor Matt Schultz has 20.7%, Christiaan Loch of One Nation has 19.7% and the Liberals' Bradley Orr has 17.3%. The Greens have 12.8% and the detritus (ballot clutter makes good snail food) is Family First 1.7% Animal Justice 1.6% Real Change 1.1% Australian Family 0.5% Jacob van Raalte (IND) 0.5% and Fair Go 0.2%.
SEATS WON ALP 34 Lib 5 ON 4 IND 4
Seats covered
Finniss (Liberal) - Liberal vs One Nation vs IND, IND has won from fourth
Kavel (IND vacancy) - Labor vs IND vs One Nation, IND stayed in top two and won easily
Hammond (Liberal) - ON win staying in top two and beating Labor on preferences
Heysen (Liberal) - Liberal vs ALP or Green, Greens narrowly missed final two with Liberal defeating Labor (Liberal probably would have won anyway)
Light (Labor) - close but Labor win
Mackillop (notional Liberal) - One Nation narrow win over Liberal
Narungga (IND) - One Nation appears to have very narrowly won subject to recount.
Morphett (Liberal) - narrow Labor win
Ngadjuri One Nation win.
LEGISLATIVE COUNCIL 4 ALP 3 ON 2 Lib 1 Green, ALP currently strongly leads for final seat.