Updates Aug 15: Today's the day - nominations close at noon; I expect we'll know the result today (parliament resumes tomorrow). Updates will be posted in this section.
Update: Candidates contesting the recount are Enders and Young (Lib), Brumby (ALP), Cordover (Green) and Flannery (ungrouped). The latter three have no chance whatsoever. Having only two Liberals contesting should mean the count is much faster with a majority on first preferences for either Enders or Young likely (unless it's very close). Even if it is very close it will not then take long to distribute the other candidates.
Update: That was quick, and a slightly surprising result too: Dean Young wins. Young defeated Enders 51.1% to 46.5% with negligible numbers for the others. That is a bullet dodged for the government which would not have been wanting Enders on board.
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Before I could even whip out a guide for the upcoming Pembroke by-election prompted by the resignation of Labor's Jo Siejka we have yet another resignation from the Tasmanian Parliament, this time from the lower house. It has been announced that Jacquie Petrusma is resigning from her Franklin seat for personal and family reasons. I don't have to cover off on the usual speculation about ministries as Felix Ellis is the big winner, landing a collection of portfolios reported as including police, fire, emergency management, resources, skills, training and workforce growth. That leaves who is contesting, the outcome of the recount and whether it will muck around with the sitting of parliament.
Petrusma is the fourth minister to leave the ministry this term (following Sarah Courtney, Peter Gutwein and Jane Howlett MLC) and the fourth Liberal MP to leave the parliament (following Courtney, Gutwein and technically Adam Brooks, who resigned his seat as soon as he was elected to it.) Four is the most government MPs to resign from the House of Assembly in one term since the 1972-6 term, which saw six Labor resignations.
Petrusma first came to Tasmanian electoral notice in the 2004 Tasmanian Senate race where, as a Family First candidate, she at times threatened to defeat Christine Milne under the now discredited Group Ticket Voting system. She later joined the Liberal Party and defeated Tony Mulder in a within-party race for one Franklin seat in 2010, and was re-elected in 2014, 2018 and 2021. In 2021 she conveniently topped the poll with over a quota in her own right.
Hare-Clark recounts consist only of the votes that elected the departing member, so how many primary votes a candidate got in the recount and how close they came to being elected has no direct bearing on the result. Except in highly unusual circumstances (and this is not one of them) these recounts always elect a member of the same party as the vacating member. The contenders are therefore whoever contests out of former Huon Valley Mayor Bec Enders, newsagent and 2019 federal candidate Dean Young and Clarence City Councillor and podiatrist James Walker. Walker was a late replacement in the 2021 Franklin campaign after original candidate Dean Ewington was found to have criticised the government's COVID management.
At this stage Young has confirmed he intends to contest. Comment re the others' decisions to contest or not contest will be added when known
Because Petrusma was elected on primary votes, the recount consists solely of her primary votes, and there is information from her surplus about where many of them will go. What is known of the distribution is as follows:
18.73% 1 Petrusma 2 Young
13.74% 1 Petrusma 2 Walker
The way they're going the government will be made up of people that no one actually elected.
ReplyDeleteHas there ever been a case where the recount does not go to the same party as the retiring member?
ReplyDeleteThe only case where someone who had not run as the same party as the retiring member was Bob Brown (IND) replacing Norm Sanders (DEM) despite other Democrats contesting the recount. There's also a case of a Labor member replacing an Independent (Reg Turnbull) instead of the Independent's running mate, and the recent Madeline Ogilvie case where Ogilvie had originally contested as a Labor member but did not sit as such after winning a Labor vacancy recount.
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