Cause of by-election resignation of Sussan Ley (Lib)
Dr Kevin Bonham
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.
Saturday, May 9, 2026
Farrer By-Election Live
Cause of by-election resignation of Sussan Ley (Lib)
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.
The myth that Sack Dan Andrews was a Labor front has resurged on twitter mainly because of far-right attention-seeker Avi Yemini. Yemini has been promoting attempts to create deceptively named parties called Save The Environment Party, Free Palestine Party and Muslim Votes Matter (not to be confused with the actual MVM movement active at the last federal election), whose Group Ticket preferences would then favour One Nation or other right-wing parties. The first of these at least is the work of fellow traveller Monica Smit. Yemini - who has blocked me on twitter which prevents me from replying to many of his myths being posted there - has claimed that what is being done here is simply "flipping the script" from when Sack Dan Andrews siphoned preferences to Labor. Except that actually never happened.
I have a mixed view of these tactics. There is obviously a heavy dose of trolling the left alongside sincere opposition to group ticket voting, and if these parties actually formed and ran then they would clearly be dishonest. But far more contempt belongs to the system that enables and rewards such tactics. Scrapping group ticket voting would mean that any votes for deceptively named parties would simply scatter to whoever the voters chose to preference next, rendering the siphoning attempt ineffective. If these attempts actually help to highlight the urgent need to get rid of group ticket voting before this year's election then they will have served a useful purpose. Perhaps there is an intent by the far right to use these tactics to claim credit for scrapping group ticket voting and this might make some in Labor reluctant to give them the satisfaction. However if that is a concern, I won't let them get away with it. You'll see ...
Origins of SDA
There are multiple accounts of what Sack Dan Andrews actually was. The party was founded and led by Tosh-Jake Finnigan, previously known as a whistleblower in the "red shirts rorts" scandal which despite the unsubtle attempts of the Herald-Sun had no impact at all on the 2018 "Danslide" election result. It had a website that attacked Daniel Andrews and ... not much else. The claim that SDA was actually a fake anti-Andrews party designed to steal votes by deception originated with Glenn Druery in the Angry Victorians sting video:
"So let me tell you about Sack Dan Andrews [...] it's one of mine [..] I looked all over Aidan's social media [..] every other post was "Sack Dan Andrews, Sack Dan Andrews, Sack Dan Andrews" - aha! We're going to form a Sack Dan Andrews Party. We did, me and my allies. That's been formed because if that gets a decent draw it's going to completely usurp Clive, One Nation and poor little Aidan".
Druery went on to discuss how SDA was a fake "cooker party" that Aidan McLindon (of the so-called Freedom Party) still thought was a real "cooker party" and how the aim was to win a seat. At no point in the video did he say SDA was working with Labor or funelling preferences for anyone else, the impression was simply that the idea was to nab primary votes with a catchy and deceptive name and deprive the non-Druery right wing parties of those votes.
The Sack Dan Andrews party responded to the sting with a Statement Regarding Glenn Druery which opened with the particularly solid line "Unsurprisingly Glenn Druery talks copious amounts of shit" and claimed Druery had no involvement beyond Finnigan telling Druery that the party was running. Finnigan explicitly denied that SDA was a Labor feeder, outlined SDA's preferencing strategy and said that if SDA preferences elected any Labor candidate they would "coward punch myself on a joint Discernable/ 6 News Australia live stream." Finnigan reiterated that SDA was an attack on Labor but also praised Druery for his success in getting minor parties elected.
There is an obvious logical problem with the idea of SDA being a Labor Party front. Why on earth would Finnigan, who was a disgruntled whistleblower against Labor in a prominent scandal, participate in such a thing?
The actual SDA preference tickets
It's a sad sign of the laziness of social media ghettos that many posters have repeated the line that SDA sent preferences to Labor without bothering to find out whether the group ticket preference assignments might be, for instance, actually available online to see who this party actually gave preferences to. And indeed they are online, and prominently, via the ABC. In general SDA put Labor close to last.
Where they didn't, one of the confusing aspects of group ticket voting is that parties may appear to have given a high preference to another party when what they have actually done is given a high ranking to some candidates for that party - but those candidates will actually be elected or eliminated before the preference can reach them. This is often used by parties to muddy the waters about who they are preferencing, though I'm not aware of evidence that that was SDA's intention in this case.
In Eastern Victoria, the party preferenced Labor dead last.
In Northern Metropolitan and Southern Metropolitan, the party preferenced Labor last except for the Greens.
In North-East Metropolitan, the party preferenced Labor last except for preferencing Sonia Terpstra above all Greens and all Liberals except Matthew Bach, and also Shaun Leane above one Liberal, Nick McGowan.
In Northern Victoria, the party submitted two tickets, both of which had Labor above the Greens, and one of which also had Labor above United Australia, Reason, Victorian Socialists and Coalition but below fifteen other parties.
In South-East Metro, the party submitted two tickets, both of which had Labor above the Greens and Victorian Socialists. One also had Labor above the Liberals except that one Liberal was below the first Labor candidate listed, and one had the Liberals above Labor except vice versa.
In Western Metropolitan, the party preferenced Labor last except for an independent and the Greens and Liberals.
In Western Victoria, the party put the third Labor candidate Megan Bridger-Darling seventh, behind its own candidates, Hinch Justice and one Shooters Fishers and Farmers candidate. The rest of Labor appeared way down the ticket, alternating with Coalition candidates and above the other Shooter (weird), Animal Justice, Victorian Socialists and Greens.
As for which parties the SDA tickets preferenced highly this varied quite a bit. Generally they preferenced minor parties with sometimes the odd major party candidate thrown in. Most of the parties they preferenced highly were Druery alliance parties, but not all, with the Angry Victorians party and Freedom Party appearing high on some of their lists. Mostly the Druery alliance parties they preferenced were on the right but not all, eg they had Animal Justice (thought to be an alliance party but had actually ratted on Druery) as their top preference after themselves in one region.
What votes did they get and where did they go?
The Sack Dan Andrews party did not poll much, managing just 0.83% statewide.
This is what happened with their above the line votes in each count. I also comment on whether the SDA preferences could have caused a different winner (at least via an obvious route) had they been different.
* Eastern Victoria: Their ticket preferences split between the Shooters Fishers and Farmers and Health Australia. On the exclusion of Health Australia their ticket preferences reunited with Shooters Fishers and Farmers, who went on to be elected easily. SDA preferences had no impact on the result as Shooters would have won anyway.
* North-Eastern Metro: The party's preferences would have flowed to Rod Barton of the Transport Matters Party but Barton's preference spiral had already failed. They therefore flowed to Health Australia. On Health Australia's exclusion they flowed to the Liberal Democrats, and then to Labour DLP's Hugh Dolan who went on to narrowly lose to the Greens. Again no impact on the result.
* Northern Metro: The party's preferences flowed to Labour DLP's Adem Somyurek who went on to win the final seat. Again no impact on the result.
* Northern Victoria: The party's preferences split between Animal Justice and Liberal Democrats. On the exclusion of Liberal Democrats the remainder pooled with Animal Justice who were elected, then flowed to One Nation who were also elected on Animal Justice's surplus. Again no impact on the result.
* South-East Metro: The party's preferences split between Derryn Hinch and the Liberal Democrats' David Limbrick. On the exclusion of Hinch the remainder pooled with Limbrick. Limbrick narrowly defeated the Liberals for the final seat. Had SDA preferenced the Liberals above Limbrick, the Liberals would have won, so the SDA's preferencing decision caused Limbrick to retain his seat.
* Southern Metro: The party's preferences flowed to Sustainable Australia's Clifford Hayes who lost to Labor by a large margin. No impact on the result.
* West Metro: The party's preferences flowed to Bernie Finn (Labour DLP) who ended up losing to the Liberals by a very narrow margin. No impact on the result but they very nearly caused Finn to win.
* Western Victoria: The party's preferences flowed to DHJP incumbent Stuart Grimley who ended up losing the final seat to the Liberals. However there was in the meantime a close contest between the Greens and Legalise Cannabis. Had SDA preferenced Legalise Cannabis ahead of Grimley, Legalise Cannabis would have defeated the Greens, who SDA put last (all this being another example of how stupid group ticket voting outcomes and decisions are). Although this was the region where they had put Labor's third candidate Megan Bridger-Darling at a rather high 7 on their preference list, the preference was never reaching her because Grimley was higher at 4 and was always going to climb high in the count based on seven Druery parties preferencing the DHJP ticket next after themselves.
No Sack Dan Andrews ticket preferences reached Labor at any live stage in any count.
Myth variant
A very common variant of the myth says that Sack Dan Andrews preferences re-elected or helped re-elect the Labor government. In fact they could not have done so since government is determined in the lower house and Sack Dan Andrews only contested the upper house. Furthermore it is only possible to direct voter preferences through group ticket voting in the upper house so Sack Dan Andrews could not have sent preferences anywhere in the lower house - it could only have recommended preferences via a how to vote card, and if those preferences favoured Labor then the few voters even seeing such a how to vote card would have immediately smelled a rat. And finally, Labor actually led on primaries statewide and in every single seat it won except Hastings - the idea that Labor owed its lopsided 2022 win to doing well on preferences from anyone is simply wrong.
Overall, the myth is attractive to people who hate Andrews because it sounds to them like the sort of thing that Victorian Labor might do. While Victorian Labor have to a degree brought this perception on themselves by failing to get rid of Group Ticket Voting in twelve years in office (sigh), the reality is far more prosaic. If Sack Dan Andrews was even a front at all, it was clearly not a front for Labor, Labor did not benefit from its preferences, and there is no evidence or reason to believe that Labor had anything at all to do with it.
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.
1. The Howard era ringfence
In the first heyday of One Nation, Group Ticket Voting in the Senate was famously bad for the party. What would happen is that the major parties, Democrats and Greens would put One Nation last and this would more or less starve the party of preferences. In 1998 One Nation was overtaken in two states where they were leading in the race for the final seat as a result of the major parties preferencing each other above them. In 2001 Pauline Hanson lost in Queensland where she had a large lead over the Democrats but the strong flow of group ticket preferences between left parties saw them easily overtake her. Basically unless One Nation polled a quota in its own right in those days it couldn't win seats under GTV.
However, this hasn't been the case for a long time. One reason for this is that there are these days more minor right wing parties that will give One Nation group ticket preferences on principle. Another is that over time the Coalition parties stopped putting One Nation last. The party won three seats in the Western Australian 2017 election under GTV (two of those from well short of quota and one of those from way behind the Liberals) and also won off 3.72% of the vote in Northern Victoria in 2022, overtaking four parties with higher quota totals (more on that below). Also, in some of the classic cases where One Nation were overtaken, it may well have happened had voters chosen their own preferences anyway.
2. The impact of exhaust
This argument was seen in some circles (not particularly federal Labor, who tended instead to wrongly claim that One Nation wouldn't win seats at all in the new system) in the leadup to 2016 Senate reform. The claim was that scrapping group tickets would advantage One Nation because One Nation candidates who polled modest primary votes but were struggling on preferences would benefit from some votes going to exhaust and would hang on in situations where other candidates might have caught them had voters given full preferences.
This argument has been completely discredited. It has repeatedly turned out (Malcolm Roberts passing numerous candidates in Queensland Senate 2016, One Nation winning two seats from behind in 2025, One Nation nearly beating Nick McKim in Tasmania Senate 2016 etc) that One Nation do not crawl on voter-directed preferences in the manner claimed. Instead they tend to gain on other parties, though not as quickly as they would if excluded minor right wing parties sent Group Ticket preferences their way.
3. Glenn Druery's spin
Glenn Druery frequently claims that One Nation do badly under Group Ticket Voting because he can't stand them and so he makes them do badly. Druery has an obvious financial interest in the survival of Group Ticket Voting and yet his remarks are often reported by media without any independent assessment of them, and then they feed into political bubble talk and may be believed by politicians. In fact what Druery says on this subject is misleading at best.
In the latest example, Druery has said "I am happy to say I will use all my expertise, my contacts, my experience, to do my best to stop any racists, cookers or crazies from getting into the Victorian parliament," However, at the 2022 election, most of the nine parties with a reported connection to Druery (not including the two who ratted on him) generally preferenced One Nation ahead of Labor, Liberal and Green candidates. Group Ticket preferences of seven of the nine parties actually reached Rikki-Lee Tyrell in Northern Victoria, and these preferences combined caused Tyrell to win.
Druery's claim to reliably obstruct "racists, cookers or crazies" is also not true. Groups favoured by his networked preference deals in various state and federal elections have included no shortage of anti-vaxxers, pro-gun campaigners, xenophobic "conservatives" and others who would be classed in the racist/cooker/crazy spectrum by those who tend to use such labels. Not One Nation as such, but between them candidates with every view One Nation has ever held and then some have been on board. Indeed while Druery might claim he could use his influence to wreck One Nation , it clearly didn't stop Shooters Fishers and Farmers and Labour DLP from sending their preferences One Nation's way in Northern Victoria (these two being the most crucial as even had the other seven all put Labor above One Nation, Tyrell would still have won). The fact that his alliances include parties that Druery can't or won't stop from preferencing One Nation because of who they are and who votes for them tells us everything we need to know here.
What could really happen?
Current Victorian polling suggests a reasonably close race in the lower house (especially given how favourable the 2PP pendulum from 2022 is for Labor, meaning they could potentially lose 49-51 or perhaps even 48-52 and still cling to office) but it is a different story upstairs no matter what the system. The relative closeness of the lower house race is because the conservative primary vote is split close to evenly between the Coalition and One Nation and the preference flows between them are relatively weak compared to those from the Greens to Labor. This means a large chunk of the right-wing primary vote will land with Labor as preferences.
In the upper house however more of the primary vote for the Coalition and One Nation would be likely to be locked up in quotas of winning candidates, and less would be distributed as preferences. Whatever the system on current primaries there is a real prospect at present of a combined Coalition and One Nation majority or blocking majority (20/40). Perhaps this will last, perhaps not.
The Guardian report says that Druery says that without GTVs, based on current polling One Nation could win 13-16 of the 40 seats. On current polls I don't think they would get above the range 11-13, and also they would clearly win most of those (potentially more!) under Group Ticket Voting anyway. Their average support level is about 1.5 quotas per region (25%). Their support tends to distribute quite unevenly around states when they do well and I would expect them to land below 1.3 quotas in at least three regions, at which point winning a second seat without Group Tickets is extremely difficult. To win three seats in a region without Group Tickets would require a vote in at very least the high 30s (probably 40s) and the SA election provides no reason to believe that could be sustained across a whole region.
One scenario to watch out for if Victoria keeps group tickets is this. If the combined vote of the Coalition, One Nation and supportive right micros reaches 50% in a region, and the Coalition and One Nation in effect cross-preference each other, then the Coalition and One Nation would win three seats in the region. At the moment this is the median statewide outcome in polling, especially noting that in South Australia, One Nation did better in the upper house than the lower. There could be cases where Group Ticket Voting helps the right by locking in a third seat in regions where preferences would otherwise exhaust or leak to Labor.
At this stage we don't know if the Coalition would send GTV preferences to One Nation, but it has done so consistently ahead of Labor given the opportunity in recent elections. The federal Coalition even recommended Senate preferences to One Nation in 2025 where it could easily have avoided recommending either way. If you are involved in a contest for winning government and wanting to be able to govern effectively, why would you throw seats to the opposition major party? I suspect if GTV is retained the Coalition will put One Nation above Labor even if it is well down the list.
In general Group Ticket Voting disadvantages any party with a large vote share (be it Labor, Coalition, Greens or One Nation) simply because preference harvesting can cause losses to micro-parties that don't get as many votes. But I don't think One Nation are especially vulnerable to this in the way that the Greens were in 2018. One Nation are likely to have a wide range of remainders over quota in different seats. In a GTV context this makes them worth doing deals with (in the way the Greens are generally not) and means they can win off low portions of an extra quota. They might on the other hand poll below a quota in, say, Southern Metropolitan, and be at risk under GTV of losing to a preference spiral, but I also think that One Nation will - if they do well - have sucked so much vote share out of the right wing side of the micro-party lineup that it will be harder for such spirals to work on the right anyway. Preference spirals might be more of a risk for Labor who could find themselves sitting on one point something quotas in a brace of regions and at risk of being jumped by Legalise Cannabis or others.
Anyway if anyone at all in Labor does have a concern about GTV favouring One Nation this is a discussion that should be had in the open where the reasons for the concern can be stated fully and analysed. Barring that it just sounds like another excuse to kick the can down the road.
The wrong question
Finally while it is probably futile to say it I will say that whether abolishing Group Ticket Voting would favour One Nation is not the right question anyway. If someone's argument for keeping Group Ticket Voting is that it might help some random with no real voter support beat One Nation to a seat that One Nation deserves based on actual voter support, then the person making that argument is actually against democracy, and whatever they may think of themselves they are actually worse than One Nation.
The right questions are:
* what will give voters effective and easily exercised control at party level over their own preferences?
* what will keep MLCs accountable to voters rather than to preference harvesters and luck?
* what will ensure preferences go only where voters send them, and not to places that they do not know?
* what will stop squalid scandals about seat-buying and fake front party names from bringing Victorian elections into disrepute?
* what will protect the Victorian Legislative Council from having votes corrupted by MLCs being afraid to anger an unelected consultant?
* what will prevent a repeat of the circumstances in which the 2013 WA election was voided?
* what will stop the election of MPs with no real public support?
And the answer to all of these questions is getting rid of Group Ticket Voting.
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) has very large primary vote lead and expected to win. Liberals have claimed victory.
Friday, April 10, 2026
The Amazing 2026 South Australian Election: Final Lower House Results And Poll Performance
(Changes from pre-election/notional; Labor gained two seats from Liberal during 2022-6 term)
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.)
Sunday, March 22, 2026
South Australia Postcount 2026: Finniss
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%.