Thursday, May 14, 2026

Stafford By-Election: Prospects and Live

Stafford (ALP 5.32%)
Luke Richmond (ALP) vs Fiona Hammond (LNP) and others
Cause of by-election: death of Jimmy Sullivan (ALP/IND)

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Live coverage will be posted here scrolling to the top from 6 pm Saturday.  Once counting is underway refresh every 10 mins or so for recent comments

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This is a combined prospects/live post for this week's third consecutive by-election weekend, this one for the seat of Stafford in Queensland.  Stafford is an old-fashioned vanilla two-party contest that has been overshadowed by Farrer but I think it's interesting enough to be worth covering in detail especially given some of the claims that have been made about it.  A big question here is why are the LNP running for this seat. My initial impression was they might sit it out as governments often do, but in fact there is a strong strategic case on paper for giving it a go.

Stafford is an inner north Brisbane seat that was a Labor/Liberal swing seat in its first lifetime (1972-1992) but since its revival in 2001 it has been Labor-dominated, falling only in the 2012 wipeout with 2024 its only other return to technically marginal status.  In its second life it has generally run about 9% above the Labor statewide 2PP with a low of 5.7% above in 2012.  The seat has had an increasing Greens vote at recent elections with the party polling 18.06% in 2024 (their ninth best seat in the state).  Conversely it is a dead zone for One Nation who polled 3.17% in 2024 (their eighth worst) and have decided not to risk a loss of momentum in this one.  While One Nation are surging in Queensland state polling, it is not to the same extent as elsewhere, and they'd be lucky to get double digits if they ran in Stafford.

Stafford is vacant because of the death at only 44 of second-term incumbent Jimmy Sullivan, who was first elected as a Labor MP in 2020.  Sullivan was evidently a troubled soul whose recent timeline included domestic violence allegations (abusive language), the loss of a child, post-traumatic stress, addiction and other health issues.  He had been on a long period of leave from parliament from late 2024 and had been removed from the Labor caucus in May 2025 for allegedly failing to comply with a "safe return to work" plan.  The exact cause of his death, described in some reports as a possible accident, is as yet not publicly known.

Stafford had a significant by-election in 2014 when its fall to Labor on a 19.1% 2PP swing presaged the sensational 2015 defeat of the one-term Campbell Newman LNP government.  This has been used by Premier Crisafulli to goad Labor saying that if they can't get a double digit swing here then what are they doing.  But the two are completely non-comparable.  Stafford in 2014 was a government vacancy where swings are generally larger, and it was also a vacancy for a government that had scored a 2PP nine points higher than Crisafulli's at the previous election.  

So what should we expect?  The general pattern is that by-elections see swings against the government, but this is muted when they are opposition vacancy by-elections, which almost as often as not see small swings to government.  This is partly because the opposition has lost the personal vote of its incumbent, and also because governments tend to cherrypick which such by-elections they bother contesting in the first place.  There actually aren't that many recent Queensland cases (and a lot of them are unusual - pandemic, retiring ex-Premiers, local independents and so on) but nationally the average is about a 1% swing to the opposition in such cases, with a high standard deviation.  There isn't generally any difference between by-elections caused by resignations and those caused by incumbent deaths.  

The LNP has already made one by-election gain in this term, picking up Hinchinbrook with a huge swing after popular KAP MP Nick Dametto decided he would rather be the mayor of Townsville and didn't even clearly endorse his old party on the way out the door (though apparently he did vote for them).  That was a special case but for what it's worth government gains in by-elections do most often occur when the state government is in its first term and the opposition is "federally dragged" by being the same party as governs in Canberra - both the case here.  

The LNP government is also polling well (on sparse evidence) on average at the moment after a few iffy Resolve readings last Spring.  It led 56-44 2PP in a Redbridge poll late last year and a DemosAU in February.  Two small Resolve samples in Jan-Feb and March-April I estimate at 54.6 and 52.4 to LNP respectively.  

Beyond the debates about issues like petrol costs and health services, the by-election background is unusually noisy with distractions at the moment including debate about an on-off-on affair between Ministers Tim Mander and Amanda Camm, Opposition Leader Steven Miles apologising after being found in contempt of Parliament for misleading the House and former Premier Palaszczuk's partner being charged with rape and deprivation of liberty, all of which he denies.  And then of course there's the federal Budget.

Other points of interest

The Greens have decided to issue an open how to vote card at this by-election.  I've been unable to find any clear public explanation (as distinct from apparent retro-justifications) for this decision. If it had been a head office call as an experiment or to send Labor a warning that might make some sort of sense but it seems to have been a local decision.  I do wonder if it is inspired by the recent idea that the Greens need to be becoming more populist, like a One Nation of the left, instead of being so "establishment".  It has sparked criticism including some from within.   

Decades ago when the Greens used to issue open cards more commonly the impact on flow was low (5-10%). These days in this sort of educated seat the preference of Green voters for Labor is so strong that this may not make any real difference at all - though even a slight flow change could hurt Labor's 2PP by several tenths of a point because of the size of the Greens primary. In the federal seats of Deakin and Menzies in 2025 the Greens issued open HTVs on the main voting day only; the flow from the Greens to Labor nonetheless increased albeit by slightly less than the national increase - on that basis the impact of the decision on flows in the booths was at most a few percent, and could well have been nothing.  In Clark 2022 (a special case by being in Tasmania where interest in how to vote cards is always low) an open HTV also had no impact on 2PP flows.   My suspicion is that while about 15% of Greens voters will follow how to vote cards, a high proportion of them will preference Labor anyway if there is no card (as happens in Tasmanian Legislative Council elections where how to vote cards are banned).  The 2024 count in Stafford saw 83.7% of Greens exclusion preferences (overwhelmingly 1 Green) flow to Labor.  I will be surprised if that falls to even 75%.

The rest of the field consists of Family First, Legalise Cannabis, Animal Justice, a Libertarian and two candidates running as independents for currently unregistered parties.  One of these, Damian Smart, is running for Gerard Rennick People First while Liam Parry is the candidate for the Queensland Socialists.  The Socialist run is interesting firstly because it is the unofficial debut for this party in the sort of seat where they might poll significantly, and secondly because Parry is one of two people who have been charged under Queensland's laws restricting the use of certain pro-Palestinian slogans.  Although the ban is supposed to only apply when the slogans are used in a manner that could be reasonably expected to cause someone to feel menaced, harassed or offended, police have been taking action against the slogans even where it is not remotely clear that that condition is met.  

The Sunday Mail's "poll"

The Murdoch tabloids in Australia and particularly in Queensland have a long history of conducting "exit polls" mostly at prepoll stations and then interpreting them cluelessly and unprofessionally without expert analysis, as a result deceiving their readers about what the "polls" are actually saying in the interests of blatant hype.  (Sometimes when interpreted correctly these "polls" are actually useful.) I pointed out what a debacle this was in the 2024 state election leadup but no amount of making these points appears to stop these papers from embarrassing themselves with this dishonest and sloppy poll reporting.  

This has continued with the latest effort in which off the back of a doubtless uncontrolled sample of 300 voters at prepoll on May 7-8 we are told that the LNP is "on track to pull of a historic upset" and that Labor is "relying on unpredictable Greens preference flows to cling on to the seat by its fingernails."

The actual numbers in this sample have the LNP on 41.7%, Labor on 36.7% and the Greens on 12.7%.  No breakdown is given for the remaining 8.9%.  

The first thing to note here is that the remaining 8.9% are likely to skew left, perhaps heavily so depending on whether Parry is taking any substantial number of votes from the Greens.  But even with a 55% flow from the others and a 75% flow from the Greens, Labor would still just win on these numbers, 51.1-48.9.  The second problem is that comparing these numbers with a general election is not comparing like with like - they are prepolls.  In 2024 within-electorate prepolls in Stafford were LNP 40.52% Labor 36.9% Greens 18.4% - very close to identical to the Mail's sample except for its lower Greens vote.  (The prepolls were about 1.5% 2PP worse for Labor than the seat in general.) And furthermore the sample is not just prepoll, it is prepoll early in the prepoll period, which is likely to be more conservative than average.  So what this sample if accurate is actually pointing to is a Labor retain, perhaps with a small swing against.

From the LNP's perspective when deciding to contest Stafford, they would probably detect some chance (even if only a small one) that they actually win the seat. A win for them in a seat that was ALP+7 to the state average at the last election would be a disaster for Labor, of the sort that causes leadership change.  Even a very close result would be a very bad night for the ALP. But that aside there is a decent chance on paper that the LNP would get a 2PP swing of some kind (which would lead to significant bragging rights).  A small swing against the LNP is easily dealt with by misleading nonsense about the average by-election swing being several points and even more misleading nonsense the swing being nothing like 2014.  So it's not really easy for the LNP to clearly embarrass themselves in this one.  And while a big swing (say 6% and up) against them would raise some questions, they would also learn things in the process.  

Given the LNP's strong state polling but also that the LNP is coming off a high base election I would consider any 2PP swing to Labor above 3% to be a good result for Labor.  Any swing to the LNP at all would be a good result for the LNP and a 0-3% swing to Labor is the inconclusive zone.  And Saturday is not far away so soon enough we will see how they go.  

Saturday, May 9, 2026

Farrer By-Election Live

Farrer (Lib vs IND 6.2%, Lib vs ALP 12.9%)
Raissa Butkowski (Lib) vs Michelle Milthorpe (IND), David Farley (ON) and others
Cause of by-election resignation of Sussan Ley (Lib)

CALLED (7:46 pm) Farley (One Nation) gain from Liberal

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Live comments will appear here from 6 pm - once counting gets going from around 7, refresh every 10 minutes or so for latest comments.

Monday 11th: We don't quite know the flows by party yet but what we can track is the proportion of Coalition voters whose votes would need to be switched by a different HTV recommendation for the Coalition parties' decision to preference One Nation to have decided the seat. Currently that number runs at 33.6% (this is Liberal and National combined).  As noted below, while normally it's quite feasible that an HTV decision would carry that much weight, in this case I think probably not.

Although David Farley has obviously won Farrer very easily the mathematical proof that he has done so will require a distribution of preferences meaning he's a fortnight or so from taking his seat.  See here.

Sunday 3:45 Is This A Record: The massive swings to the Liberals and against One Nation have had me asked, is this a record?  I get the primary vote swing against the Liberals as the highest in a by-election since the 32.1% swing against Labor in ACT 1970 (Labor nonetheless won the seat and the next election).  The swing to One Nation is the highest in a by-election to a recontesting party ever, except for the dubious case of Gwydir 1937 (44.2% to the official ALP in the absence of Labor (NSW)).  There have been some higher by-election swings involving parties and independents starting from scratch.

Sunday 9:00: Milthorpe did do well on the last prepoll and the margin sits at 57.3-42.7, this may go up a little on remaining postals but won't change much.  I've had a question about what would have happened had the Coalition recommended preferences to Milthorpe: if normal Coalition HTV card rate follow rates had applied, Milthorpe would be leading something like 51.5-48.5.  However with the low Coalition vote and the likelihood that voters would have seen such a recommendation as puzzling, I'm not sure that would have played out.  It's also possible that the Liberal attacks on Farley caused some voters to not follow the card anyway.  At least, it would have been much closer.  

11:20 All in on primaries now, EAV Farrer will be very few if any votes, a couple not yet in on 2CP.  Good job by AEC to get all booths counted this quickly.

10:54 Only two prepolls left, one of which may be very small.  Looking at the Greens' 2.22%, unless they can get it above the 2.56% they got in Grey 2016 it will be their worst result in a seat (general election or by-election!) since 2.21% in Flynn 2013 or perhaps even 1.97% in Flynn 2007.  This in the absence of a Labor candidate ... not good!

10:35 A few prepolls coming in, now six to go, but no major change to the picture.  

9:30 So what have we seen?  Some big picture comments while waiting to see what other booths come in.  Labor were very wise to sit this one out but it was hardly a difficult decision.  There could well be specific factors in the nature of the Liberals' utter drubbing here: anger at Sussan Ley's dumping as leader, the unusual nature of the One Nation candidate, local water issues - but looking at the extent to which the Liberals have been smashed here the Coalition has reason to be very nervous across a host of rural seats; for the time being at least what is going on in the polls is fully real.  Normally the messages sent by voters at by-elections are against the government (and we saw the Liberals do just fine in the Nepean state by-election last weekend) but in this case voters have turned on the Opposition, kicking an Opposition out of the top two in a seat it held for the first time ever at federal level.  (I am not sure how many cases of this there are at state level if any).  

I don't know if Michelle Milthorpe was ever going to be that competitive here.  Voting in a Climate 200 backed independent would have seemed too much like politics as normal in a decidedly right-leaning seat, and would have rewarded the government.  Milthorpe tried to get away from the "teal" label but without a lot of success.  While she has a swing on primaries, it's in the absence of Labor and with a very low Greens result.  I would think that some voters who would have backed her as a way to send a rocket to the majors have just found a bigger rocket.  

9:20 Every booth apart from some of the hospital and remote booths is now in.  Still waiting for eight prepolls.  Being mostly the larger sort they are likely to drag down the 2CP somewhat though I'm liking 58 more as an endpoint than my earlier 57.  It doesn't matter, Farley has won a thumping victory.  

9:12 Sorry for the technical problems with that!  No idea what happened with my internet there.  

8:48 Online at Tallyroom now.

8:12 Yeah it's not looking good for the Greens' deposit here.  They might still get over Legalise Cannabis because the latter are dropping back.

7:55 Looking at the others, at the moment nobody outside the big four is recovering their deposit, though the Greens will presumably come up as more of Albury enters the frey.  They would hope to as they're currently on 2.4% behind Legalise Cannabis (again!) I'm calling last for Roger Woodward, no idea what he was doing running here.  

7:50 I do think this is likely to finish up under 60-40 now, perhaps 57 or so.  Milthorpe is doing better in some of the later Albury booths in and also the preference flow is continuing to even up.  

7:46 Some of Milthorpe's best booths from the federal election are in and even in these she is down on the 2CP pseudo-swing.  CALLED.  

It is interesting that the preference flow to Farley so far isn't stronger.  It may be he's ripped out so much of the Coalition vote that only very moderate voters are left in any numbers.  

7:37 With more data, the corellation between One Nation's vote last time and the swing this time came back, and the other corellations continued, so they're doing better in small booths and booths where they did well.  All three projections say One Nation is winning easily, somewhere around 60-40.    The first prepoll is now in, Buronga and that isn't doing anything unusual compared to what we have seen before.  

7:30 Another projection method now is 2025 2CP vs 2026 2CP and this suggests One Nation are winning very easily.  Even in Springdale Heights which was a good booth for Milthorpe in 2025 she is only barely winning the 2CP.  William Bowe and Ben Raue both just called the seat.

7:20 The bigger booths are now dropping to low 20s.  At the last election the median booth voter voted in a booth with 734 voters which would put One Nation on about 40% in the booths, maybe a bit higher this time because the booth size will be slightly smaller.  So that's another way of trying to project this.

7:12 There is a relationship between booth size and swing to ON though, at present in the largest booths it's tracking around 33 and in the higher booths towards 50.  And now as more booths come in Farley is dropping down to the low 40s, such as that is.   

7:00 Now as more booths come in my model is finding NO corellation between previous ON vote and swing to One Nation which means it thinks for now Farley is just going to keep doing what he's doing now all night and win hugely!  I suspect there'll be an urban component that will drag that down but this is a great start for Farley.  

6:53 Springdale Heights says hello as the first booth with One Nation sub 40 and Milthorpe on 32.  In an early projection off five booths based on an assumed nonlinear swing I am putting ON on high 30s, 38.6% to be precise ... let's see how bad that is later on!

6:50 Two more in and One Nation continually smashing it in the littlies, though these are booths they did well on last time.  Milthorpe now has a primary vote swing to her after four booths, albeit just a small one.  

6:38 Booth two, an obvious candidate for silliest booth name in Burrumbuttock with a 60.7% One Nation vote (a 49% swing in a strong booth for them to begin with.)  Milthorpe down a lot in this one. I would expect there will also be some relationship between booth size and swing, or otherwise this is going to be called very quickly! 

6:30 We've got votes!  46.4% for Farley off 88 votes at Rankins Springs (a mere 42% swing).  For what it's worth that's fairly close to where he lives.  Milthorpe down 2.3% (she's coming off 20% seatwide but I suspect that swing will change.)  Also for what it's worth, a 19-15 break to Milthorpe on preferences which are mostly from the Coalition.

6:00 And we're on!  The AEC 2CP is ONE NATION vs MILTHORPE (IND).  If these are not the correct top two it will be realigned.  Note that primary vote swings to ON in early rural booths are likely to be exaggerated compared to those they get later.  For this reason projections off the 2025 totals are likely to be unreliable. (I'll be running projections on the assumption of a non-linear swing to One Nation later tonight if the data back that up.)  There are certainly cases of incumbent parties missing the final two at elections but I wonder if one has ever been left out of the initial notional 2CP before!  

12:10 Signage of concern: The AEC has issued a statement concerning an inappropriate election sign.  In my view this sign further underlines the need for laws in all jurisdictions that specifically target electoral material that gives a false impression of endorsement by an election authority.  Breaching such a law should be a very serious offence.  UPDATE: The AEC has obtained an injunction against the signs which have now appeared at other booths.

Intro 11:30 am

Well here we are at election day for the rather odd Farrer by-election.  Absent of a Labor candidate in a seat where they would not be competitive anyway, this one is mainly seen a litmus test for what we have seen in national polling with One Nation having surged to a level just above the Coalition.  That picture has stabilised since about February; it's even possible that One Nation might be going down very slightly.  More on federal polling here after the Budget.  However the by-election has become peculiar as such things go because of revelations that the One Nation candidate David Farley has supported both Labor and independent Michelle Milthorpe (now his main rival) in the very recent past.  Will this hurt Farley or are voters seeing him as a semi-independent in a positive way as they did with Helen Dalton when she was elected as a notional Shooters Fishers and Farmers candidate at state level?  All sorts of history beckons - an opposition has never missed the 2CP in its own seat in a federal by-election, and One Nation have never before won a by-election at state or federal level, nor have they ever won a federal seat with an endorsed candidate.  Also complicating the picture is the fact that while receiving Climate 200 funding and support, Milthorpe's energy comments make her not exactly a teal from central casting.  

My guide to this by-election has been here.  It is widely expected - but curiously not by voters in my sidebar Not-A-Poll - that Farley will win, perhaps easily, and that he could well lead on primaries.  

As concerns tonight firstly the prepoll lineup is essentially the same as at the general election, except that three prepolls that were just outside the electorate have been replaced with prepolls just inside.  We can treat Barooga as a like for like with Cobram, Buronga for Mildura and Mulwala for Yarrawonga.  None of these are all that large anyway and all of them are conservative and on the whole likely to be One Nation leaning compared to the average.

47591 prepoll votes have been cast; 46624 were counted in 2025.  15801 postals have been issued with about 10.5K received so far, there may be another 3000 or so to actually return but a small portion of all postals that return will be rejected.  In 2025 10983 postals made it into the count.  These numbers will be offset by the absence of 5439 absent and out of electorate prepoll votes from 2025 so the number of total votes in non-booth categories will be down by about 2000.

A big suspense item for tonight's count is who the AEC will count the notional two-candidate count between; if they pick the wrong pair then the 2CP figures on the night will be useless and those will be realigned in coming days, or potentially there may need to be a 3CP to determine the correct final two.  (The AEC will be briefing election media about the progress of the count mid-week in the event that things are messy).  It is generally expected (and backed by such polling as exists) that the final 2CP in the seat will be Farley vs Milthorpe with the Liberals missing the 2CP in their own seat but whether the AEC goes with ON vs IND, Lib vs ON or Lib vs IND remains to be seen.   In the event that the Coalition combined primary exceeds either Farley's or Milthorpe's we will not know the Coalition/ON/IND split from the minor Coalition candidate on the night.  

Meanwhile there will always be other curious aspects of this count - how bad will the informal rate be?  How many of this lot will recover their deposits? Who will finish last?  And so on.  

By-elections are magnets for clueless turnout sookery so people should bear in mind that wherever turnout gets to by the end of tonight will not be final.  By-election turnout is frequently down several points on the main election, especially when a major party doesn't contest.  

At 8:30 tonight I will be joining Ben Raue for some live streaming of the count.  





Wednesday, May 6, 2026

The Urban Myth That "Sack Dan Andrews" Was A Labor Front

Does this look like a Labor front to you?

Group ticket voting in Victoria has again been in the news a lot lately - see my latest article about whether abolishing it would assist One Nation.  With this latest discussion has come a resurgence of a longrunning online urban myth concerning the shortlived Sack Dan Andrews party (or more formally Restore Democracy: Sack Dan Andrews Party) in the 2022 Victorian election.  The myth is that this party was set up to harvest the votes of people who hated former Victorian Premier Andrews and channel these votes back to Labor.  The reality is that while there is a disputed claim that Sack Dan Andrews (SDA) was a siphoning attempt of some sort, Labor gained no benefit from it anyway, and it had nothing to do with the party.  This article explores the reality of this short-lived party's preferences and its actual impact on the election in detail.  For those on twitter I also have a shorter version of events on a thread here.

Monday, May 4, 2026

Would Scrapping Group Ticket Voting In Victoria Help One Nation?

On this website I have frequently covered Victoria's ongoing failure to repeal the use of Group Ticket Voting in state Legislative Council elections.  Victoria is now the last state that still has this system, which has been scrapped everywhere else after being gamed by preference-harvesting.  In the current cycle the Electoral Matters committee in an outstanding report recommended the scrapping of Group Ticket Voting way back in July 2024, and the government has still not responded officially to that recommendation.  The clock is ticking in terms of time for the Victorian Electoral Commission to implement the changes required to move to a different system, and the Commission has said the decision must be made by August.  After recent issues involving service delivery by state electoral commissions I suggest the sooner the better.

Last week there was reporting by the Guardian this week that one Labor MP had said current Premier Jacinta Allan "had appeared reluctant to [scrap GTV] as it would benefit One Nation."  Separately I understand that the view that scrapping GTV would benefit One Nation is also espoused by some Labor lower house MPs.  Irrespective of who actually holds that view, this article is to explore this claim.  

The Guardian's article does not say why anyone holding this concern might hold it, and in the absence of any actual claimed mechanism it is not that easy to counter.  However there are at least three well known myths about how Group Ticket Voting is supposedly bad for One Nation in the modern age.  Here they are and here is why they are wrong.

Saturday, May 2, 2026

Legislative Council 2026: Huon and Rosevears Live And Post-Count (Plus Nepean!)

Huon: Clare Glade-Wright (IND) elected, gain from Dean Harriss (IND)

Rosevears: Jo Palmer (Lib) retain. 

NEPEAN (VIC): CALLED 8:30 pm Marsh (Lib) retain
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3:03 All over, Palmer wins 52.8-47.2 after a 79-21 split to Labor on the Greens exclusion. A very respectable result for Labor in the north despite losing.

12:00 Palmer didn't cross off Monson but needs a trivial 7.8% of Greens preferences. Based on the scrutineering estimates she will probably end up with a 52-54 2CP which is reasonably close. Maybe at or above the higher end because the Monson-McLennan prefs will be weaker for Labor.

Friday, April 10, 2026

The Amazing 2026 South Australian Election: Final Lower House Results And Poll Performance

SA 2026 ALP 34 (+5) Lib 5 (-9) ON 4 (+4) IND 4 (-)
(Changes from pre-election/notional; Labor gained two seats from Liberal during 2022-6 term)

Estimated 2PP ALP 57.89 vs Liberal (+3.3)
Estimated "Shadow 2PP" ALP 58.19 vs One Nation

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.

Tuesday, April 7, 2026

Legislative Council 2026: Rosevears

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.  

Tuesday, March 31, 2026

Tasmania Redistribution: The Reaction

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."

Saturday, March 28, 2026

Legislative Council Voting Patterns 2022-6

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.)